iWriteGigs

Fresh Grad Lands Job as Real Estate Agent With Help from Professional Writers

People go to websites to get the information they desperately need.  They could be looking for an answer to a nagging question.  They might be looking for help in completing an important task.  For recent graduates, they might be looking for ways on how to prepare a comprehensive resume that can capture the attention of the hiring manager

Manush is a recent graduate from a prestigious university in California who is looking for a job opportunity as a real estate agent.  While he already has samples provided by his friends, he still feels something lacking in his resume.  Specifically, the he believes that his professional objective statement lacks focus and clarity. 

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Manush’s story shows the importance of using powerful keywords to his resume in landing the job he wanted.

Exam 2

Navigation   » List of Schools  »  California State University, Northridge  »  Sociology  »  Soc 305 – Culture and Personality  »  2019  »  Exam 2

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Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:

Question #1
A  The biological factors of violence are usually attributed to neurological vulnerability of the individual deviant.
B  The sociocultural factors of violence are deeply rooted in the rapidly changing American social structure and cultural values in the post-modern era.
C  None of the other three
D  The psychological factors of violence derive from dysfunctional or pathological socialization of the deviants in his/her childhood or early adolescents.
Question #2
A  Japanese seem to be more disciplined and orderly yet less free and creative than Americans.
B  American culture ensures a high degree of freedom and creativity
C  Japanese culture is individual centered
D  American society is highly vulnerable to deviance and alienation
Question #3
A  It constantly challenges traditional norms
B  It has yet to replace the old cultural ethos
C  It features computer, the internet, and social media
D  It has not reconstructed a new cultural ethos
Question #4
A  Anomie remains to be the most significant structural and cultural source of deviance
B  Anomie is becoming normalized in post moderns society
C  Anomie is more prevalent among postmodern societies, particularly among those with a high degree of individualism and a rapid rate of social change.
D  Postmodern generation has become increasingly sensitized to the culture of anomie (social fragmentation and existential alienation)
Question #5
A  Deviance is unthinkable without norms
B  What is normal or abnormal is culturally irrelative
C  Multi-dimensional concept of normalcy involves statistical, biological, psychological, sociocultural normalcy
D  Deviations from norms in a given society are considered as abnormal and subject to negative sanctions.
Question #6
A  It maintains the most restrictive gun laws in the world
B  It has the most open immigratin policies
C  It produces the highest homicide rate among the leading postmodern societies
D  It has the highest divorce rate in the world
Question #7
A  Deviance takes place as part of a labeling process by a social audience.
B  Deviance is abnormal behavior or norm-violating behavior that transgresses the tolerance limits of a community
C  Deviance is always manufactured by society, particularly by a powerful group of people
Question #8
A  Needs for belonging and acceptance, rationalization of deviations, and successful defenses
B  Stigma attaching labeling and social rejection/isolation
C  entrance to deviant subculture (secondary deviance)
D  primary deviance (violation of norms)
Question #9
A  All of the other three
B  Paranoid, Schizoid, Schizotypal, Antisocial
C  Borderline, Histrionic, Narcissistic
D  Avoidant, Dependent, and Obsessive-Compulsive
Question #10
A  Is neither pervasive nor inflexible.
B  Does not necessarily lead to distress and impairment
C  has an onset in adulthood or senior stage.
D  Is an enduring pattern of inner experience and behavior that deviates markedly from the expectations of the individual’s culture.
Question #11
A  Social order, fixed rules and authority stage
B  Identity claim and role play stage
C  Punishment-obedience orientation stage
D  Universal ethical principla orientation stage
Question #12
A  American adolescents are more subjected to peer stress than their counterparts in other countries.
B  Peer relations tend to produce pressure to conform to peer norms and expectations.
C  Peer relations are uncorrelated to high school dropout nor teenage suicide.
D  Peer relations have the most impact in all outcome behavio measures of adolescents
Question #13
A  Rejection of the aggressor’s values and hostility toward the perpetrator.
B  The initial shock and feelings of disbelief, and other helplessness and worthlessness.
C  Regression into infantile behavior and child-like dependency.
D  The period of denial, apathy and depression.
Question #14
A  Intelligence increases with age in some dimensions while declining in others.
B  Intelligence does not decline with age
C  Intelligence declines with age.
D  Intelligence declines with age in some dimensions but in other dimensions.
Question #15
A  Each life stage is characterized by a crisis or dilemma
B  The positive and negative components of each stage are mutually exclusive
C  the various life stages are not equal in length, depending on cultural and individual differences.
D  All of the other three
Question #16
A  Schaefer’s hypothetical model for maternal behavior consists of two bipolar dimensions of mother’s attitudes and disciplinary behavior: love versus hostility and control versus autonomy.
B  Accordig to Dimsdale, effective coping strategies are functionally interlinked in order of relative importance, forming a hierarchy of functional coping strategies for mitigating the impact of stress under extreme conditions.
C  The consistency theory asserts that personality changes consistently and persistently throughout adulthood.
D  The phenomenon of adolescence is a by-product of industrialization and concomitant of sociocultural changes in the modern world.
Question #17
A  Life-stage theories generally contend that personality develops through a certain pattern of sequential age-linked stages that are more or less universal.
B  The life-span approach emphasizes the interaction of individual and social characteristics throughout the life span.
C  Life-course views focus on age-graded norms, generation effects, role transitions, and historical context on personality development
D  None of the other three.
Question #18
A  All of the other three
B  Charismatic leadership and her worship
C  Counter, delinquent, and mainstream values and norms.
D  In-group ingo or argot and unique styles of fads
Question #20
A  Activation of defense.
B  Re-expereince of the trauma
C  Numbing of responsiveness
D  Post-trauma onset of symptoms
Question #21
A  The higher th degree of modernizatio, the lower the degree of social status and integration of the elderly in a given society.
B  More and more people realize that successful aging means to stay healthy, economically secure, and socially active.
C  An increasing number of older people prefer to live separately from their adult children
D  A vertical social structure and a traditon of filial piety can counteract the impact of modernization on the care of the elderly in a given society.
Question #22
A  Social acceptance of divorce in America
B  Liberalization of divorce law
C  American wives’ extensive participation in the workforce
D  Poverty and violence in inner American cities
Question #23
A  Social activities
B  School
C  Family
D  Peers
Question #25
A  A sense of collective identity
B  A collective superiority over childhood
C  The primary group need satisfaction
D  A collective protection from adult controls.
Question #26
A  Engagement Theory.
B  Disengagement theory
C  Role change theory
D  Activity theory
Question #27
A  A resurgence in creativity in the later years of life.
B  A decline in mental functions among the elderly.
C  continued engagement in role activities by old people.
D  Withdrawal from active roles and social interactions in old age.
Question #28
A  From the reflex or hereditary stage to the state of the first motor habits.
B  From the stage of intuitive intelligence to the stage of practical intelligence
C  From the stage of the first differential emotions to the stage of the first external affective fixations
D  From the stage of concrete intellectual operations to the stage of abstract operations.
Question #29
A  Father absence caused by divorce have more severe consequences than that caused by death
B  Father absence in the first two years of infancy is critical and may lead to feminine orientation in boys.
C  Father absence is associated with a decrease in verbal abilities and writing skills in children
D  Father-absent girls are more aggressive and exposed to sexual experiences at an earlier age than father-present girls
Question #30
A  The armored-defended
B  The unintegrated
C  The passive-dependent
D  The integrated
Question #31
A  Quantitative and qualitative changes
B  Direction of change from simple to complex
C  Inconsistency and non-cumulative influence
D  Critical age and experience
Question #32
A  Make certain key choices and pursue his or her goals within a formed structure.
B  Experience a transition in his or her occupational role
C  Shift from one life structure to another
D  Experience a transformation in marital life
Question #33
A  Invariant order of developmental changes
B  Over-generalization from Western experiences
C  Staged changes throughout the lifespan
D  Maturational determinism
Question #34
A  Health and safety hazars, the threat of unemployment, and job insecurity
B  Psychological withdrawal, time-out activities, and hiding behind policy rules
C  high levels of role ambiguity or conflict and lack of participation in decision making
D  Heavy workloads, tight deadlines, and underutilization of abilities
Question #35
A  The punitive-disenchanted path
B  The transcendent-generative path
C  The midlife crisis path
D  The pseudo-developed man path.
Question #36
A  Adolescents’ stressful life events
B  Different rates of socialization
C  Physiological and psychological differences
D  Rapid social cultural changes
Question #37
A  Natural disasters such as earthquakes and epidemics.
B  Neither natural nor man-made disasters
C  Man-made disasters such as total institutions and hostage cries
D  Both natural and man-made disasters
Question #38
A  Age and racial discriminations
B  Age and gender discriminations
C  All of the three
D  Age and ethnic discriminations
Question #39
A  Individual differences in response to deprivation need to be emphasized as many children are not affected by mother deprivation
B  “Maternal deprivation” is too heterogenous and the effects are too varied for any meaningful analysis
C  Some deprivation effects are reversible, depending on timing, duration and intensity of deprivation
D  Personality disorder of mother-absent children are linked with broken homes not because of the mother absence per se but rather because of the discord and disharmony which led to the break
Question #41
A  Normalized anomie and violence
B  Rationalized terrorism
C  Institutionalied oppression
D  All of the other three
Question #42
A  Role withdrawal
B  Role attrition
C  Role substitution
D  Role continuity
Question #43
A  Mastery, denial, psychological removal, regression, and depndency/identification
B  Ineffectualization, belief in mortality, time distortion, a sense of humor, and the Musselman-type apathy.
C  Differential focus on the good, survival for some purpose, psychological withdrawal, mastery, and group affiliation
D  The will to live, the mobilization of hope, regressive behavior, surrender to stress, and fatalism
Question #44
A  Intelligence decreases with family size, the fewer the children in your family, the smarter you are likely to be. Intelligence also decreases with birth order, the fewer older brothers or sisters you have, the brighter you are likely to be.
B  Intelligence is not necessarily a product of how many brothers and sisters you have, and of your seniority in the family.
C  Intelligences increases with family size, and the more children in your family, the smarter you are likely to be. Intelligence also increase with birth order, the more older brothers or sisters you have, the brighter you are likely to be.
D  The later born is more extroverted, sociable, empathetic and risk-taking than the first born.
Question #45
A  Rewards will come automatically if we do what were supposed to do
B  Life is simple and controllable. There are no significant coexisting contradictory foces within me.
C  I’ll always belong to my parents and believe in their world
D  There is no evil or death in the world. The sinister has been destroyed
Question #46
A  masculine/feminine
B  Physical growth/decline
C  Attachment/separateness
D  Destruction/creation
Question #47
A  Psychological removal
B  Null coping
C  Anticoping
D  Regressive behavior
Question #48
A  Inconsistency in parental behavior
B  Age, gender, and birth order of the child
C  Parental hostility in combination with restrictiveness
D  Cultural differences in gender role and parenting
Question #49
A  Social avoidance and withdrawal
B  Fear of rejection
C  Insensitivity toward the future
D  Identity ambivalence