Créer une activité
Jouer Ordonner les Lettres
1. People in society acts the same in the same circumstances due to _____ , which are rules that dictate behavior.
S M N R O
2. Norms guide our behavior without _____ _____ , because they are so engrained , like when someone cuts line & you realize they just violated a norm.
R R E N E S S O A W U A
3. Norms can change due to the creation of a new elements in a culture, or due to the spread of elements between cultures ,which is called _____ .
O F D I S I F N U
4. Rules for customary ways of feeling, behaving, & thinking are called _____ , like sleeping on the floor when you own a bed. Since they are not crucial to group welfare, breaking them does not earn much disapproval.
L Y O F S W A K
5. Since _____ are crucial to the well-being of a society, violation draws strong disapproval & conformity brings strong approval. They are based on the word moral & deal with conduct related to right and wrong.
E S O M R
6. In extremely religious societies, men do not need to have their bodies _____ in _____ , but women do, proving that sometimes cultural practices differ by gender.
E D U C B O P E C V I L R
7. Norms so important that the group must punish anyone who violates them, this describes _____ , which are the most significant of mores.
B O T A S O
8. _____ are norms that are enforced by officials, and formally defined by the government. They are created quickly and purposefully, unlike other norms.
S L A W
9. Today most states have laws that forbid _____ in public, although this behavior was allowed 50 years ago, an example of a folkway becoming a law.
G I M S N O K
10. Formal sanctions can only be enforced by people who are _____ _____ , like a high school principal or a police officer. Society requires this because some people refuse to comply with norms.
F I N O I F C E Y T E D G D A I L L A S
11. When people loaned money to others and made a profit off the interest, it was called _____ , and it was punished with public ruin & humiliation. This punishment is an example of negative formal sanctions.
Y U S U R
12. If you yell at someone for cutting line, or you thank someone for holding the door open, you are practicing informal sanctions, which are sanctions that any _____ of society can apply.
E B E M R M
13. Sanctions are not necessary for most adults. They conform because they believe the norm is appropriate, or because they fear _____ _____ , or because they don't like feeling guilty.
A L A D O I S A I P O V P C L S R
14. _____ are more general than sanctions & norms; This allows them to serve as broad ideas for what a society considers desirable.
E U S A V L
15. A society can have various groups create _____ _____ from the same value; This happens because values are general & do not provide specifics for how people behave, feel, & think.
F N R M R F I E D T S E O N
16. A society that wants democracy will have rules that ensure personal freedom. This is because values serve as the basis for _____ , demonstrating their great influence on social behavior.
S R M N O
17. Regular & continuous work is a goal in the U.S., according to sociologist Robin Williams, who identified values that guide most people. Williams also claimed that Americans prefer _____ _____ _____ .
C O V T A O I T N N O A E R I N C I
18. Robin Williams argues that Americans value group superiority, but Americans also stress _____ and _____ , which creates conflict between the three values.
Q I Y L A C A E M C T Y U D E R O
19. Due to the passage of _____ _____ laws, current Americans are less likely to make racist comments. This means Robins Williams’ values have changed & there is less group superiority in America.
G V I C T L R I S I H
20. Contemporary sociologists want to add friendliness, _____ , & honesty to Robin Williams' list of American Values, even though the list is still pretty accurate.
I O P M S M T I