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Chapter 3 Chapter 3 Culture Culture
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Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Chapter 3 Chapter 3 CultureCulture

Page 2: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Section 1 Objective Culture defines how

people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior among animals is instinctual, human behavior is learned. Even reflexes and drives do not completely determine how humans will behave, because people are heavily influenced by culture.

• explain how culture and heredity affect social behavior.

Page 3: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Define the following vocab

Culture

Society

Instincts

Reflexes

Drives

Sociobiology

Page 4: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Fill in the Blanks Culture provides the ___1___ ___2___

that people in a society use to guide ___3____ _____4____ ___5__ ___6___.

1. Blue 4. Relationships

2. Print 5. With

3. Their 6. Others

Page 5: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

What 2 things can not exist without

each other?CultureSociety

These 2 are tightly interwoven.

Behavior based on culture culture is learned behavior

Page 6: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Which is more important? Culture or Instinct.

Culture is the more important of the 2.

It can carry us past where instinct leaves off.

Page 7: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

What is the nature vs. nurture argument? Is it

justified? How much of

personality is heredity & how much of it is learned behavior?

You can justify either direction, with the right argument.

Page 8: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Why do genetically inherited

personality traits not control social

behavior?

Different cultures teach them different

things.

Page 9: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

What behaviors are viewed by sociobiologists to contribute to

the survival of the species? Parental care &

Affection Friendship

Sexual Reproduction

Education

Page 10: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

List 3 criticisms of Sociobiology

Importance placed genetics could be used to justify races superior or inferior

To much variation in societies around the globe to base behavior solely on genetics

Use of language unique to humans, as well as the complex social life

Page 11: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

When genetics and culture work together what has been found?

Shape and limit human nature and social life

Step-parents are more likely to abuse step-children than their own children

Men & Women look for different characteristics when choosing a spouse

Page 12: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Section 1 Main Ideas:

Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior among animals is instinctual, human behavior is learned.

The Basis Of Culture

Page 13: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Section 2 Objectives Humans can create

and transmit culture. The symbols of language play a role in determining people’s views of reality.

• describe how language and culture are related.

Page 14: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Define the following vocab

Symbols

Hypotheses of linguistic relativity

Page 15: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Why are symbols

important?

Help to create and transmit culture

Make up Language

Meaningful representation of

something

Page 16: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Why is language important?

Allows us to create culture

Allows us to read, discuss, & recombine existing ideas

Can pass along experiences, ideas, & knowledge

Page 17: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

What can vocab tell us about a culture?

When something is important to a society, its language will have many words to describe it. Americans w/

Money

Page 18: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Are we prisoners of our Language?

Exposure to other languages gives us other view points. If we only know & use 1 language we are stuck.

Page 19: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Section 2 Main Ideas:

Humans can create and transmit culture. The symbols of language play a role in determining people’s view of reality.

Language and

Culture

Page 20: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Section 3 Objectives The essential

components of culture are norms, values, beliefs, and material objects. Sanctions are used to encourage conformity to norms. Values, the broadest cultural ideas, form the basis for norms.

name the essential components of culture.

Page 21: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Define the following Norms Sanctions

Folkways Formal Sanctions

Mores Informal Sanctions

Taboo Values

Law

Page 22: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

List some norms in American

life.

List 5 and explain each of

them

Page 23: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

What are the 3 types of norms?

Folkways

Mores

Laws

Page 24: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

List some examples of folkways.

Supporting a school activity

Speaking to others in passing

Removing your hat while inside a building

See the chart on pg. 82

Failure to do these draws no real punishment, but you do these as a sign of politeness.

Page 25: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

How are mores

different from

folkways?Conformity draws

strong social approval, violation

brings strong disapproval

Page 26: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Why are the punishments for taboos so

strong?

Because the feelings against these are so strong some believe

punishment will come from the supernatural

Page 27: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Cite the differences between

Folkways/Mores

Emerge slowly & are often created unconsciously

Laws

Consciously create & enforce (usually don’t change)

Page 28: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

How are sanctions used

to shape behavior?

Rewards are used to encourage

appropriate behavior while punishment reinforces that the

behavior is unacceptable

Page 29: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

How have American norms change in relation

to values? Racism on decline

People working as hard at leisure activities as the do at work

Increased emphasis on honesty & friendliness

Page 30: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Section 3 Main Ideas:

Two essential components of culture are norms and values. Norms include folkways, mores, and laws. Sanctions are used to encourage conformity to norms. Values, the broadest cultural ideas, form the basis for norms.

Norms and

Values

Page 31: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Section 4 Objective Besides norms and

values, beliefs and physical objects make up culture. Ideal culture includes the guidelines we claim to accept, while real culture describes how we actually behave.

understand the role of ethnocentrism in society.

Page 32: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Define these important words

Nonmaterial culture

Beliefs

Material culture

Ideal culture

Real culture

Page 33: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

What makes up a culture?

Values

Norms

Knowledge

Ideas

Physical objects

Page 34: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

T/F beliefs can be

based on false

thoughts?

True

Check out this picture and think

about some others

Page 35: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Why is the cultural meaning of physical objects not determined by

physical characteristics? Meaning of

physical objects are based on beliefs, norms, & values people hold with regard to them

Page 36: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Using the topic of honesty, cite an example of ideal vs. real culture.

Page 37: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Section 4 Main Ideas:

Besides norms and values, beliefs and physical objects make up culture. Ideal culture includes the guidelines we claim to accept, while real culture describes how we actually behave.

Beliefs and

Material Culture

Page 38: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Section 5 Objective Cultures change

according to three major processes. Cultures contain groups within them called subcultures and countercultures that differ in important ways from the main culture. People tend to make judgments based on the values of their own cultures. While apparently very different on the surface, all cultures have common traits or elements that sociologists call cultural universals.

identify similarities in cultures around the world.

Page 39: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

More vocab! (Yeah!) Social Categories

Subculture

Counterculture

Ethnocentrism

Cultural Universals

Cultural Particulars

Page 40: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

What are 3 reasons cultures change?

Discovery process of finding something already in existence

Page 41: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

What are 3 reasons cultures change?

Invention creation of something new

Page 42: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

What are 3 reasons cultures change?

Diffusion borrowing aspects of culture from other culture

Page 43: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Give an example of a subculture & reasons why?

Chinatown American culture effected greatly; but have retained things such as language, diet, & family structures

Page 44: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Why is “Punk” considered a

counterculture?

Rebellion against social norm of

thinking, dress, behavior, &

sexuality

Page 45: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Why are the Olympics seen as ethnocentric?

Country’s medal standing is taken as a reflection of their worth & status on the world stage

Page 46: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Give the “Pros” & “Cons” of ethnocentrism.

Pro

Postive feelings when what they do is right or superior

Stability due to tradition & valued behavior

Con

Complacency (not ingenuity)

Violence against others due to lack of understanding

Page 47: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

List some cultural universals

Sports/ cooking/ courtship/ education/ family/ government/ joking/ language/ mourning & marriage/ music/ sexual restrictions

Page 48: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

What 3 things cause cultural universals?

Biological similarities

Physical environment

Face same social problems

Page 49: Chapter 3 Culture. Section 1 Objective  Culture defines how people in a society behave in relation to others and to physical objects. Although most behavior.

Section 5 Main Ideas:

Cultures, which contain subcultures and countercultures, change through three major processes.

Cultural Diversity

and Similarity