Transcript Ch 4 Soc
Socialization
The importance of
Socialization
1. nearly all human social behavior is learned
2. socialization - cultural process of learning to participate in group life
3. begins at birth and continues throughout life
4. most important learning occurs early in life
5. without socialization infants cannot develop the set of attitud, belief
values and behaviors associated with being an individual
6. touching, holding, stroking and communicating appear to be
essential to normal human development
7. Harlow’s study
a. control group v experimental group
b. infant monkeys need intimacy, warmth, physical contact and
comfort
c. isolated monkeys became apathetic, withdrawn, hostile adults
Socialization and Self
1. functionalist perspective
a. working together - families, schools, they have the
same basic norms, beliefs and values
2. conflict perspective
a. groups work to preserve their social status
b. people learn to accept their position before they have
enough self-awareness to realize what is happening
Socialization and Self
3. symbolic interactionism (concepts)
a. self-concept - an image of yourself as having an identity
separate from other people
b. the looking-glass self - an image of yourself based on what
you believe others think of you
1. 1st - we imagine how we appear to others
2. 2nd - we imagine the reaction of others to our
appearance
3. 3rd - we evaluate ourselves according to how we
imagine others have judged us
(result is positive or negative self-evaluation)
Socialization and Self
c. significant others - those people whose reactions are most important
to your self-concept (parents, teachers, peers, employers, etc.)
d. role taking - take the viewpoint of another person and shape your
self-concept from that viewpoint
1. imitation stage (11/2 - 2) mimics others
2. play stage (3-4) children act like they think others will act
3. game stage (5-6) children anticipate the actions of others
based on social rules
4. self (2 parts - “me” - “I”)
a. “me” - the part of the self formed through socialization
(predictability, conformity)
b. “I” - the part of self that accounts for unlearned,
spontaneous acts
Agents of Socialization
1. Family - child learns to think and speak, internalize norms,
beliefs and values, form some basic attitudes, develop
relationships, and acquire a self-image
2. School - relationships are impersonal, and rewards and
punishment are based on performance rather than affection
a. hidden curriculum - discipline, order, cooperation,
conformity (characteristics required for success in the adult
world)
Agents of Socialization
3. Peer group - set of individuals of roughly the same age and
interests
a. only agency not controlled by adults
b. give and take relationships
c. conflict, competition, cooperation
d. self direction, self-expression
e. independence from adults
4. influence of friends and family
a. many children spend more time with friends than family
(single parent homes, long commuting, 2 working parents)
Agents of Socialization
5. Mass media
a. teach many of the ways of society
b. provide children ideas about values in society
(images of achievement and success, activity and
work, equality and democracy)
c. violence in the mass media
1. watching aggressive behavior on TV
significantly increases aggression
Process of Socialization
1. desocialization - giving up old norms, values, attitudes
and behaviors
a. total institutions - people separates from the rest of
society (mental hospitals, cults, prisons)
2. resocialization - adopting new norms, values, attitudes
and behaviors
3. anticipatory socialization - preparing in advance to
accept new norms, values, attitudes and behaviors
(voluntary)
4. reference groups - group with whom you identify