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Study Guide

📖 Core Concepts Socialization – The lifelong process by which people internalize the norms, values, customs, and ideologies of their society. Primary vs. Secondary Socialization – Primary occurs in the family (early childhood); secondary occurs in schools, workplaces, and other groups. Anticipatory & Resocialization – Learning a future role before it’s lived (e.g., career prep) vs. discarding an old identity and adopting a new one (e.g., prison, military). Looking‑Glass Self (Cooley) – We shape our self‑image based on how we think others view us. Generalized Other (Mead) – The internalized set of cultural expectations that guides behavior. Moral Development Stages (Kohlberg) – Pre‑conventional → Conventional → Post‑conventional reasoning. Psychosocial Stages (Erikson) – Eight life‑span crises, each balancing a virtue vs. a vice (e.g., trust vs. mistrust). Digital Socialization – Acquisition of norms, values, and identity through online platforms; includes both bonding (strong ties) and bridging (weak ties). Political Socialization – The long‑term internalization of a society’s political values, primarily via political parties. Nature–Nurture Interaction – Both genetic predispositions and social influences shape beliefs and behavior. --- 📌 Must Remember Socialization Functions – Maintains cultural continuity, shapes behavior, can produce “moral” outcomes aligned with societal standards. Key Agents – Family (primary), schools/workplaces (secondary), peers (group), media/digital platforms, political parties (political). Kohlberg’s Stages Pre‑conventional: avoid punishment / seek pleasure. Conventional: obey laws, seek social approval. Post‑conventional: apply universal ethical principles. Erikson’s 8 Stages – Trust, Autonomy, Initiative, Industry, Identity, Intimacy, Generativity, Integrity. Looking‑Glass Self – “I am what you think I am; I am what I think you think I am; I am what I think I think you think I am.” Resocialization Two‑Step Process – (1) Strip old identity, (2) Build new identity. Digital Filter Bubbles – Algorithms curate content that reinforces pre‑existing beliefs, intensifying echo chambers. Genetic vs. Environmental Influence on Personality – 50 % genetic, 10 % home environment; peer groups dominate in adulthood. --- 🔄 Key Processes Primary Socialization Child ↔ family → internalize cultural norms, language, gender roles. Secondary Socialization Individual ↔ institution (school, workplace) → learn role‑specific scripts and values. Anticipatory Socialization Observe/ rehearse future role → adjust attitudes and skills before actual entry. Resocialization in Total Institutions Step 1: Isolation, uniformity, loss of prior status. Step 2: Intensive training, new symbols, reinforced new norms. Mead’s Role‑Taking Sequence Play stage → role‑taking of specific others → “generalized other.” Digital Socialization Cycle Online interaction → algorithmic curation → feedback loop → identity reinforcement. --- 🔍 Key Comparisons Primary vs. Secondary Socialization Primary: family‑centered, foundational values. Secondary: institutional, role‑specific, expands beyond family. Kohlberg vs. Erikson Kohlberg: focuses on moral reasoning (cognitive). Erikson: integrates psychosocial crises across the lifespan (identity & relationships). Looking‑Glass Self vs. Generalized Other Looking‑Glass: micro‑level, based on perceived judgments of specific others. Generalized Other: macro‑level, internalized societal standards. Digital vs. Offline Socialization Digital: rapid, algorithm‑mediated, creates filter bubbles. Offline: slower, face‑to‑face, limited by physical social circles. --- ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “Socialization ends in childhood.” – It is a lifelong process; secondary, anticipatory, and digital socialization continue into adulthood. “Genetics alone determine personality.” – Genetics set potentials; social contexts (peers, institutions) shape actual outcomes. “Digital platforms always broaden horizons.” – Algorithms can narrow exposure through filter bubbles. “Resocialization only occurs in prisons.” – Any major life transition (e.g., marriage, immigration, career change) can trigger resocialization. --- 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition “Cultural Blueprint + Personal Toolkit” – Think of socialization as receiving a cultural blueprint (norms, values) and then building a personal toolkit (skills, identity) through practice in various settings. “Social Mirror” – Visualize yourself as a mirror reflecting back the reactions of others; the clearer the mirror (accurate feedback), the more stable the self‑image. “Algorithmic Echo Chamber” – Imagine a canyon where your voice (opinion) bounces back repeatedly; the louder the echo, the harder it is to hear a different tone. --- 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Oppression Socialization – Marginalized groups may internalize power hierarchies differently; standard “norms” may be resisted or re‑interpreted. Acculturation vs. Assimilation – Acculturation = adapting to a new culture while retaining some original identity; assimilation = full adoption of the new culture, often losing the original. Total Institutions – Not all resocialization follows the strict two‑step model; some modern workplaces use “soft” resocialization (e.g., corporate culture onboarding) that blends identity retention with new norms. --- 📍 When to Use Which Diagnosing a moral dilemma – Apply Kohlberg if the issue centers on abstract reasoning about right vs. wrong; use Erikson if the conflict involves identity or relational crises. Analyzing behavior change in a new job – Use Organizational Socialization concepts (knowledge, skills, values, jargon) rather than primary family‑based models. Understanding online identity formation – Turn to Digital Socialization (filter bubbles, hybrid sociability) rather than traditional face‑to‑face socialization theories. Evaluating political attitudes – Focus on Political Socialization agents (parties, media) over generic developmental models. --- 👀 Patterns to Recognize “Stage‑Specific Tasks” – Each life stage (Erikson, Hurrelmann) carries a developmental task; failure to master predicts the next stage’s conflict. “Two‑Step Resocialization” – Look for (1) identity stripping (uniforms, loss of personal items) followed by (2) intensive norm teaching (rituals, language). “Algorithmic Reinforcement Loop” – When a student’s online activity shows increasingly homogeneous content, suspect a filter bubble influencing beliefs. “Peer Dominance in Adulthood” – In adult personality studies, peer influence outweighs parental influence; watch for peer‑group norms driving behavior. --- 🗂️ Exam Traps Confusing “primary” with “early” socialization – Questions may list secondary agents (schools) under primary; remember primary = family/home. Mix‑up between “acculturation” and “assimilation” – Acculturation = bidirectional adaptation; assimilation = unidirectional adoption. Assuming digital socialization is wholly positive – Distractors may cite only benefits; remember algorithmic bubbles and cyberbullying are documented negatives. Over‑attributing moral reasoning to age alone – Kohlberg stages are about reasoning level, not strictly chronological age; a teenager can operate at a post‑conventional level. Equating “looking‑glass self” with “generalized other” – The former is micro‑level, the latter macro‑level; exam items may blend them to test precision. ---
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