In the example of Jillian Rosenberg from this study, which best describes how she was treated in society?
a. Since her name was Rosenberg, people treated her as if she was Jewish-American, despite the fact that she has half Mexican.
b. Because of the color of her skin, people assumed she was from Mexico and treated he as if she was an illegal immigrant.
c. In her Southern California culture, she was made to feel negative and lower-class, but at college, she was "exoticized" as non-white.
d. She embraced both cultures, never felt an "identity crisis' from it, and never felt any sort of discrimination or different sort of treatment.
C
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In order to ensure that experimental and control groups are similar before the experiment begins, social scientists sometimes: a. pair subjects who are identical on relevant variables and assign one to the control group and one to the experimental group
b. create groups that are equivalent in terms of their averages on some relevant variables. c. randomly assign subjects to the experimental and control groups. d. match subjects on relevant variables. e. engage in activities mentioned in all of these choices.
Group differences in IQ tests and SAT scores are related to all of the following, except: a. parental education
b. childhood socialization. c. social class status. d. peer groups.
Name and describe each of the stages in the development of role taking
What will be an ideal response?
The exclusion of minorities from the upper levels of education is likely to affect their opportunities, such as access to high-paying jobs and advancement. This is an example of how institutional discrimination is reinforced because institutions are
a. prejudiced. b. closed systems. c. socially conscious. d. interrelated.