UCSP

Cards (50)

  • is a social system that is composed of people assigned to perform a definite task and function in a social system called social institution.

    Society
  • is constituted by two or more persons who interact together and are together physically.
    Group
  • the people are found in one place but they do not interact with each other. The important characteristics of which is the common physical location.
    Aggregates
  • is an agglomeration where members possess common identifying status characteristics but do not interact socially.
    Social Category
  • they are composed of clusters of people who share some kind of beliefs that prepare them for action, instinctively forming a temporary or short-lived group.
    Collective
  • is a concept that social scientists have developed for the scientific study of society, culture, and personality The concept "Organization' was used by sociologists in two different ways. First, to stand for a relationship among people, and Second, as a type of a particular social system called formal organization
    Social Organization
  • refers to the independent network of roles and the hierarchy of statuses which to define the reciprocal expectations and the power arrangement of the members of the on social unit guided by norms
    Social Structure
  • refers to the sum total of behavior expectations and activities associated with a social position which a holder is supposed to carry out and perform. It conveys the prescribed or ideal standards of behavior that a holder of a social position is supposed to carry. It is the manner by which a given individual performs the duties and obligations of a status and enjoys its privileges and prerogatives.
    Role
  • has a component known as social function. It refers to the results of action that occur in relation to a particular structure and includes the results of the activities of individuals occupying particular statuses
    Social Function
  • is something that a social group or institution does that is intentional and beneficial to society.
    Manifest Function
  • are those that are neither recognized nor intended. A function of a behavior is not explicitly stated, recognized, or intended by the people involved.
    Latent Function
  • is a community of individuals with close personal and family ties.
    Gemeinschaft
  • is "public life" or the world itself
    Gesellschaft
  • a type of social group where the total personality of the human being is taken into account. The relationships are intimate and face to face. Communication is profound and strong, and personal satisfactions are of utmost important
    In primary group relationship
  • a type of social group where this relationship involves a reaction to only a part of the individual's personality. The person's importance to the group is the function that he or she performs in the group. this group relationships tend to be casual, temporary, and limited in personal involvement
    secondary group relationships
  • a type of social group that shows preferences for people within your group
    In-Group
  • a type of social group, automatically disliking people who are not within your group
    Out Group
  • a type of social group where it refers to the groups that are significant to us as models though we ourselves may not be a part of the group.
    Reference Group
  • is a group-shared image of another group or category of people. It can be positive, negative or a combination of both
    Stereotype
  • blood relationship. refers to the web of social relationship that form an essential part of the lives of most societies.

    Kinship
  • refers to the origin or background of a person in terms of family or nationality.
    Descent
  • -the legally or formally recognized union of two people as partners in a personal relationship
    -an institution consisting of a cluster of mores and folkways, of attitudes, ideas and ideals of social definitions and legal restrictions.
    Marriage
  • -is the basic social institution and the primary group in society .
    -characterized by common residence, economic cooperation and reproduction.
    -a group of persons united by ties of marriage, blood or adoption, constituting a single household, interacting and communicating with each other in their respective social roles of husband and wife, mother and father, son and daughter, brother and sister and creating and maintaining a common culture.
    Family
  • A family structure, smallest unit responsible for the preservation of the value system of the society.
    Nuclear Family
  • A family structure, composed of two or more nuclear families, economically and socially related to each other.
    Extended Family
  • Based on descent, the child finds it necessary to ask support from his father's kin.
    Patrilineal Descent
  • Based on descent, the child finds it necessary to ask support from his mother's kin.
    Matrilineal Descent
  • Based on descent, the child asks support either from the father or mother's kin.
    Bilateral Descent
  • Based on Residence, newly married couple live with or near the domicile of the parents of the bridegroom.
    Patrilocal Residence
  • Based on Residence, newly married couple live with or near the domicile of the parents of the bride.
    Matrilocal Residence
  • Based on Residence, newly married couple live either with or near either of the parents of the bridegroom or of the bride.
    Bilocal Residence
  • Based on Residence, newly married couple live independently of the parents of either groom or bride.
    Neolocal Residence
  • Based on Residence, newly married couple reside with or near the maternal uncle of the groom.
    Avunculocal Residence
  • Based on Authority, authority is vested in the eldest male in the family, often the father.
    Patriarchal Family
  • Based on Authority, authority is vested in the mother or mother's kin.
    Matriarchal Family
  • Based on Authority, both the husband and the wife exercise a more or less equal amount or degree of authority.
    Egalitarian Family
  • Based on Authority, the father's prolonged absence gives the mother a prevailing position in the family. Example in the Filipino family if the father works abroad.
    Matricentric Family
  • practiced in a society affect the structure of the family's larger kinship group.
    Forms of Marriage
  • Forms of Marriage, allows or permits a man to take only one spouse at a time
    Monogamy
  • Forms of Marriage, a plural marriage.
    Polygamy