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Sociology
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Marriages and Families in the 21st Century A Bioecological Approach
Quiz 1: The Changing American Family
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Question 21
True/False
Very few, if any, countries, cultures, and religious groups also have rules, customs, and policies about the people whom its citizens should definitely not marry.
Question 22
True/False
Men around the world typically retain more power in family dynamics than women do.
Question 23
True/False
The international community and the UN have decided that individual human rights are significantly less important in some cases than cultural traditions.
Question 24
True/False
The "modernization" of the family was completely the result of the general evolution of "the" family, as early family sociologists originally posited.
Question 25
True/False
When most of us learned about the American history in school, we were taught the history of European Americans. Other groups' experiences were either briefly described or not described at all.
Question 26
True/False
A coprovider family is what we call today a single-earner structure, where only one partner contributes to the family income and the other stays at home.
Question 27
True/False
Despite our popular mythology, there were actually very few multigenerational households with warm and loving grandparents welcoming each grandchild's birth.
Question 28
True/False
The church plays a minimal, if not absent, role in African American mental and spiritual resilience and there is often very little community support system available for black families.
Question 29
True/False
The higher Asian American socioeconomic status can also partially be explained by the fact that they settled mainly on the East and West Coasts where wages are higher.
Question 30
Short Answer
These are interactional variables like caring, sharing, and communicating, which are not always easily visible.
Question 31
Short Answer
This term is used to refer to a family's composition, how many members it has, whether people are married, their ages, and other demographic variables.
Question 32
Short Answer
This type of family involves a deconstruction or transformation of at least one aspect of traditional SNAF ideas about what a family is.
Question 33
Short Answer
A term used to mean marrying outside their own group. For example, many religious groups do not allow their practitioners to marry outside of their religion.
Question 34
Short Answer
A term used to mean marrying within a specific circle of people. For example, many immigrants prefer their children to marry within their own group and do not approve of their children marrying a person from the new country.