Relier Pairs Social Structure & InteractionVersion en ligne This matching activity reviews terms and definitions related to social structure, social constructionism, roles, and status. par Adriane Mozzini 1 Status 2 Social Constructionism 3 Ascribed status 4 Social interaction 5 Gemeinschaft 6 Role Strain 7 Role Conflict 8 Mechanical Solidarity 9 Social structure 10 Social Roles 11 Achieved status 12 Gesellschaft 13 Organic Solidarity Societies in which social cohesion is based on shared experiences, knowledge, and skills in which things function more or less the way they always have; society runs like a well-oiled machine. Social cohesion is based on mutual interdependence in the context of extreme division of labor. People create society through their actions, and then become products of the social norms and values that they created urban, large, impersonal cities where people demonstrate little commitment to the group or consensus on values earned through our actions, whether positive or negative, so it's a social position that is within our power to change the difficulty that arises when the same social status imposes conflicting demands and expectations a set of expected behaviors for people who occupy a given social status This is usually assigned to a person at birth by society at large and generally it can't be changed, such as race or heritage the situation that occurs when incompatible expectations arise from two or more social statuses held by the same person the underlying framework of society consisting of the positions people occupy and the relationships between them a reciprocal exchange in which two or more people read, react, and respond to each other the social positions we occupy relative to others. In other words, our status is a product of our social interactions close-knit, often rural environment in which strong personal bonds unite members