A | B |
advertising, norms, and the socialization process | where we can find examples of society's values |
projection | defense mechanism where you blame other people |
primary group | a small group whose members have very close relationships over a long period of time, such as family |
nuclear family | family structure composed of only a husband, wife, and children; the "typical" American family |
psychology | the study of how the mind and body work together |
Geography | the study of the Earth and its place in the Univers; also the study of how people use the Earth and its systems and the effects that use has on our Earth |
telepathy | the ability to send thoughts to another person without the use of words or body movement |
nonverbal communication | the passing of ideas from one person to another without using words including the use of space, time, clothing, and body movement |
emotions | an important part of living, such as love, hate, and anger |
heredity | the passing of traits from your parents to you by reproduction |
SQ3R Process | survey, question, read, recite, and review |
fact | a statement that can be proven; example water is wet |
linguistics | a branch of anthropology that studies languages and their relationship to their cultures |
ethnocentrism | the attitude that your own culture is better than any other culture |
culture | the way a society lives |
artifact | anything made and used by people in past cultures and studied by archeologists |
hypothesis | an educated guess |
status | the position a person holds on the ladder of social stratification |
objective | a teaching or learning goal |
socialization | the process of learning the rules of society |
good problem solving strategies | 1) talk about problems with someone you know and trust, 2) be positive, and 3) define the problem before trying to solve it |
good study habits | participate regularly in class |
sociology | the study of people's behavior in groups |
folkways | a custom in society which is followed by persons in society who are considered polite; less serious norm than mores |
types of reading | pleasure, text, and reference |
perceptions | smelling a lemon, touching a hot stove burner, and sedeing an approaching car |
parapsychology | E.S.P. |
examples of propaganda | band wagon, plain folks, and testimonial |