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Chapter 6 lecture
   Socialization refers to the ways in which
    individuals attempt to align their own
    thoughts, feelings, and behavior to fit into
    society or groups

   Socialization is the process in which
    individuals incorporate society into their senses
    of self

   Socialization also occurs in group contexts
   From an interactionist perspective, the self is a
    symbolic exchange of language and meaning

   Although children pick up symbolic acts
    within the first few months of life, children
    need to learn language skills before they can
    fully develop their senses of self
   There are three stages of self development:
       Preparatory stage
       Play stage
       Game stage
   Other people are essential to the development of
    our senses of self

   Charles Horton Cooley argued that our senses of
    self are partly a reflection of the sentiments of
    other people, a concept called the looking-glass
    self

   We also have the ability to understand how the
    larger society may view us

   Each of us have a generalized other, our
    perceptions of the attitudes of the whole
    community
   Recent research in sociology has started to view
    childhood as a state in life in which competent
    actors negotiate their social realities in a similar
    fashion as adults

   Childhood is not just a place in which children
    learn to be adults but an active place of culture
    development and change

   From this perspective, children have
    agency, much like adults
   Norman Denzin (1971, 1977) studied the subtle ways
    that children interact with one another

   He found that even very young children, 8 to 24
    months, can participate in a “conversation of gestures,”
    nonverbal and preverbal ways of indicating meaning
    to other people

   Hence, even at very young ages children begin the
    same interactional and negotiation processes as their
    parents
   Corsaro (2005) defined children’s cultural
    routines as stable sets of activities, objects, and
    values that children produce and share in
    interaction with each other

   Children must also engage in an interpretive
    reproduction of adult culture, creatively taking
    on elements of adult culture to meet the needs
    of their peer group
   Children mold specific roles to meet the needs
    of the peer groups in three ways:
       Children take information from the adult world to
        create stable routines
       Children use language to manipulate adult models
        to address specific needs of their peer culture
       Children improvise “sociodramatic” play to acquire
        the dispositions necessary to manage their daily lives
   The subtle nature of children’s play can help us
    understand the roots of the replication of racist
    attitudes and behaviors

   Van Ausdale and Feagin’s (2002) research
    shows that racist thoughts and beliefs can be
    brought into children’s interaction at a very
    young age

   Children integrate prejudice into their
    interactions to meet the needs of those
    interactions
   Society continues to impact our development
    throughout our lives

   Scholars from the social structure and
    personality perspective examine the continued
    impacts of society through life events and
    agents of socialization
   SSP scholars emphasize the life course in the study of the
    effects of life events and agents of socialization in our lives


   The life course is the process of personal change from
    infancy to late adulthood resulting from personal and
    societal events


   There are four major themes in life-course sociology:
     Historical context
     Timing
     Linked lives
     Agency
   The first theme in life-course sociology
    examines how historical conditions may effect
    our socialization

   Historical context refers to how historic events
    affect development for people in different birth
    cohorts, a group of people born within the
    same time period

   People from different cohorts experience
    different life events at crucial moments of their
    lives
Chapter 6 lecture
   The second theme in life-course sociology
    focuses on the timing of events in our lives

   Social timing refers to the
    incidence, duration, and sequence of roles, and
    relevant expectations and beliefs based on age

   According to the life-course perspective, life
    events most affect us when timing is
    interrupted, turning an event into a turning
    point in our lives
   Life stages refer to patterns of change from
    infancy to adulthood

   Life stages typically include:
     Childhood
     Adolescence
     Adulthood
     Late life


   Life stages vary by society and provide a guide
    to what we should be doing at any given age
   The third theme in life-course sociology
    emphasizes the importance of other people in
    our lives

   Linked lives refers to our relationships with
    other people

   Linked lives have implications for access to
    varying amounts of resources with which to
    cope with life events, changing the way we
    react to them
   The last theme in life course sociology is
    agency, our ability to make decisions and
    control our destinies

   This concept is important to life-course
    sociology because individuals are able to act
    within the constraints imposed by social and
    historical conditions, leading to myriad
    possible outcomes

   Our life course is not “set in stone” by social
    conditions
   Sociologists generally view agents of
    socialization as mediators of the larger society

   Families may affect child development directly
    through their parenting techniques, for
    instance, but those techniques often reflect
    larger cultural patterns

   Three primary agents of socialization include
    families, schools, and peers
   Families are considered the first or primary
    agent of socialization because most children are
    raised from infancy to adulthood with parents
    and siblings

   Family structures have changed in the U.S.
    over the last 30 years with more single-parent
    households
   Socialization processes and outcomes are
    different among social classes:
       Middle-class families stress autonomy and
        individual development over conformity
       Middle-class families are less likely to use punitive
        child-rearing practices than their counterparts in the
        working class
       Middle-class children are more likely to value
        independence later in life than working-class
        children
   Schools are a second major agent of
    socialization, representing the institution of
    education

   Although technically designed to impart
    knowledge about many subjects, the classroom
    is also a place to learn norms of behavior

   Compared to families, schools increase role of
    peers in socialization process
   In a classic study by Rosenthal and Jacobson
    (1968), researchers randomly selected a small
    percentage of the students and told teachers that these
    were the students who should be expected to “bloom”
    intellectually over the coming year

   They found that those students who were randomly
    deemed to be “bloomers” at the beginning of the year
    showed a greater improvement in their IQ scores than
    those who had not been labeled, a process called the
    Pygmalion effect
   Recent research and theory has started to examine how
    children actively participate in the socialization process

   Adler and Adler (1998) conducted an extensive study
    of elementary-school children to understand children’s
    hierarchies, showing that children form into friendship
    cliques where they spend most of their time:
     Popular clique
     Wannabes
     Middle friendship groups
     Social isolates
   Gecas argued that peer-group socialization
    includes three areas of child development:
     The development and validation of the self
     The development of competence in the presentation
      of self
     The acquisition of knowledge not provided by
      parents or schools
   Other sources of socialization can include
    television and other electronic media

   The content of television (and other media) do
    show some long-term effects on people’s
    behavior

   Media can also be used to produce pro-social
    behavior as well
   Group processes research emphasizes the ways
    that social statuses impact interactions in
    groups

   Status characteristics theory incorporates
    socialization processes through referential
    beliefs, beliefs held in common by people
    about the relationships between status
    characteristics and reward levels

   Referential beliefs are taught to us in society
   Group processes experiments focus on the
    consequences of socialization

   Michael Lovaglia and his colleagues (1998), for
    instance, found that subjects deemed as “high-status”
    in a group experiment scored significantly higher on an
    IQ test than did participants defined as “low-status”

   Hence, the socialization of prejudice may create
    conditions under which lower expectations yield lower
    performance

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Chapter 6 lecture

  • 2. Socialization refers to the ways in which individuals attempt to align their own thoughts, feelings, and behavior to fit into society or groups  Socialization is the process in which individuals incorporate society into their senses of self  Socialization also occurs in group contexts
  • 3. From an interactionist perspective, the self is a symbolic exchange of language and meaning  Although children pick up symbolic acts within the first few months of life, children need to learn language skills before they can fully develop their senses of self
  • 4. There are three stages of self development:  Preparatory stage  Play stage  Game stage
  • 5. Other people are essential to the development of our senses of self  Charles Horton Cooley argued that our senses of self are partly a reflection of the sentiments of other people, a concept called the looking-glass self  We also have the ability to understand how the larger society may view us  Each of us have a generalized other, our perceptions of the attitudes of the whole community
  • 6. Recent research in sociology has started to view childhood as a state in life in which competent actors negotiate their social realities in a similar fashion as adults  Childhood is not just a place in which children learn to be adults but an active place of culture development and change  From this perspective, children have agency, much like adults
  • 7. Norman Denzin (1971, 1977) studied the subtle ways that children interact with one another  He found that even very young children, 8 to 24 months, can participate in a “conversation of gestures,” nonverbal and preverbal ways of indicating meaning to other people  Hence, even at very young ages children begin the same interactional and negotiation processes as their parents
  • 8. Corsaro (2005) defined children’s cultural routines as stable sets of activities, objects, and values that children produce and share in interaction with each other  Children must also engage in an interpretive reproduction of adult culture, creatively taking on elements of adult culture to meet the needs of their peer group
  • 9. Children mold specific roles to meet the needs of the peer groups in three ways:  Children take information from the adult world to create stable routines  Children use language to manipulate adult models to address specific needs of their peer culture  Children improvise “sociodramatic” play to acquire the dispositions necessary to manage their daily lives
  • 10. The subtle nature of children’s play can help us understand the roots of the replication of racist attitudes and behaviors  Van Ausdale and Feagin’s (2002) research shows that racist thoughts and beliefs can be brought into children’s interaction at a very young age  Children integrate prejudice into their interactions to meet the needs of those interactions
  • 11. Society continues to impact our development throughout our lives  Scholars from the social structure and personality perspective examine the continued impacts of society through life events and agents of socialization
  • 12. SSP scholars emphasize the life course in the study of the effects of life events and agents of socialization in our lives  The life course is the process of personal change from infancy to late adulthood resulting from personal and societal events  There are four major themes in life-course sociology:  Historical context  Timing  Linked lives  Agency
  • 13. The first theme in life-course sociology examines how historical conditions may effect our socialization  Historical context refers to how historic events affect development for people in different birth cohorts, a group of people born within the same time period  People from different cohorts experience different life events at crucial moments of their lives
  • 15. The second theme in life-course sociology focuses on the timing of events in our lives  Social timing refers to the incidence, duration, and sequence of roles, and relevant expectations and beliefs based on age  According to the life-course perspective, life events most affect us when timing is interrupted, turning an event into a turning point in our lives
  • 16. Life stages refer to patterns of change from infancy to adulthood  Life stages typically include:  Childhood  Adolescence  Adulthood  Late life  Life stages vary by society and provide a guide to what we should be doing at any given age
  • 17. The third theme in life-course sociology emphasizes the importance of other people in our lives  Linked lives refers to our relationships with other people  Linked lives have implications for access to varying amounts of resources with which to cope with life events, changing the way we react to them
  • 18. The last theme in life course sociology is agency, our ability to make decisions and control our destinies  This concept is important to life-course sociology because individuals are able to act within the constraints imposed by social and historical conditions, leading to myriad possible outcomes  Our life course is not “set in stone” by social conditions
  • 19. Sociologists generally view agents of socialization as mediators of the larger society  Families may affect child development directly through their parenting techniques, for instance, but those techniques often reflect larger cultural patterns  Three primary agents of socialization include families, schools, and peers
  • 20. Families are considered the first or primary agent of socialization because most children are raised from infancy to adulthood with parents and siblings  Family structures have changed in the U.S. over the last 30 years with more single-parent households
  • 21. Socialization processes and outcomes are different among social classes:  Middle-class families stress autonomy and individual development over conformity  Middle-class families are less likely to use punitive child-rearing practices than their counterparts in the working class  Middle-class children are more likely to value independence later in life than working-class children
  • 22. Schools are a second major agent of socialization, representing the institution of education  Although technically designed to impart knowledge about many subjects, the classroom is also a place to learn norms of behavior  Compared to families, schools increase role of peers in socialization process
  • 23. In a classic study by Rosenthal and Jacobson (1968), researchers randomly selected a small percentage of the students and told teachers that these were the students who should be expected to “bloom” intellectually over the coming year  They found that those students who were randomly deemed to be “bloomers” at the beginning of the year showed a greater improvement in their IQ scores than those who had not been labeled, a process called the Pygmalion effect
  • 24. Recent research and theory has started to examine how children actively participate in the socialization process  Adler and Adler (1998) conducted an extensive study of elementary-school children to understand children’s hierarchies, showing that children form into friendship cliques where they spend most of their time:  Popular clique  Wannabes  Middle friendship groups  Social isolates
  • 25. Gecas argued that peer-group socialization includes three areas of child development:  The development and validation of the self  The development of competence in the presentation of self  The acquisition of knowledge not provided by parents or schools
  • 26. Other sources of socialization can include television and other electronic media  The content of television (and other media) do show some long-term effects on people’s behavior  Media can also be used to produce pro-social behavior as well
  • 27. Group processes research emphasizes the ways that social statuses impact interactions in groups  Status characteristics theory incorporates socialization processes through referential beliefs, beliefs held in common by people about the relationships between status characteristics and reward levels  Referential beliefs are taught to us in society
  • 28. Group processes experiments focus on the consequences of socialization  Michael Lovaglia and his colleagues (1998), for instance, found that subjects deemed as “high-status” in a group experiment scored significantly higher on an IQ test than did participants defined as “low-status”  Hence, the socialization of prejudice may create conditions under which lower expectations yield lower performance