Qualitative Health Research

Qualitative Health Research

Since the early 1970s, psychoanalysts, social scientists, and feminists have argued that women’s desires for slen- der bodies were the cause of their eating disorders (Bruch, 1973; Chernin, 1981; Garner & Garfinkel, 1982; Orbach, 1986). Throughout the 1990s, feminists argued for a broader sociocultural analysis of eating disorders, recog- nizing that women’s role in society, contradictory female expectations, and female oppression were essential forces contributing to women’s food and body pathologies (Bordo, 1993; Fallon, Katzman, & Wooley, 1994; Nasser, 1997). Recently, there has been a movement toward understanding how sociocultural factors that evoke pow- erlessness such as poverty, immigration, heterosexism, and rapid sociocultural change affect women’s risk for eating disorders (Katzman & Lee, 1997; Nasser, Katzman, & Gordon, 2001; Ruggiero, 2003). The evolution of these arguments reflects the growing awareness that eating disorders are spreading across ethnic, cultural, socioeco- nomic, and geographical boundaries, raising questions about the sociocultural risk factors of eating disorders (Le Grange, Louw, Breen, & Katzman, 2004; Lee & Lee, 2000; Pike & Borovoy, 2004)Qualitative Health Research.

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Anorexia nervosa, the most salient eating disorder, has long been considered a culture-bound syndrome “rooted in Western cultural values and conflicts” (Prince, 1985, p. 300) predominantly affecting White, well-educated

women of middle- to upper-class backgrounds living in Western societies (Bruch, 1973). It is well established that eating disorders now afflict women living in Western and non-Western societies, and new research findings suggest that the global rise of eating disorders coincides with economic and social changes associated with accul- turation to Western values, which are believed to heighten women’s vulnerability to eating disturbances. As women around the world retool their identities in the face of glo- balization, eating disorders now affect women from dif- ferent ethnic backgrounds and sociocultural milieus (Becker, Fay, Gilman, & Striegel-Moore, 2007; Lake, Staiger, & Glowinski, 2000; Miller & Pumariega, 2001; Soh, Touyz, & Surgenor, 2006; Tsai, Curbow, & Heinberg, 2003; Wildes, Emery, & Simons, 2001)Qualitative Health Research. Clearly, as eating disorders are diagnosed in places once thought “immune” to these illnesses, their cultural boundedness, salient illness expressions (i.e., fat phobia), and prevalence have been questioned, raising concern over the sociocultural

392592QHR211010.1177/10497323103 92592CheneyQualitative Health Research

1University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut, USA

Corresponding Author: Ann M. Cheney, University of Connecticut, Department of Anthropology, Beach Hall, Unit 2176, 354 Mansfield Dr., Storrs, CT 06269, USA Email: ann.cheney@uconn.edu

“Most Girls Want to be Skinny”: Body (Dis)Satisfaction Among Ethnically Diverse Women

Ann M. Cheney1

Abstract

In this article, I present the findings from an ethnographic study of 18 women college students living in the northeastern United States. I examine how ethnically diverse women dealt with the messages of the dominant White society’s obsession with thinness, and whether it affected their perceptions of an ideal body image. From the analysis of the interviews, I identified and extracted several themes related to ethnicity, aesthetic body ideals, body dissatisfaction, and disturbed eating. Grounded in the women’s narratives, I found that ethnically diverse women coming of age in American society experience anxieties and emotional stress as they related to others in their daily lives. Their stories shed light on how the body is a vehicle for social mobility and is used by women from marginalized identities to strategically negotiate social inequalities embedded in daily social relationships and interactions that more privileged women do not encounter.

Keywords

adolescents / youth; body image; eating disorders; ethnicity; gender

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determinants of eating disorders (see Lee, 1997; van’t Hoft & Nicolson, 1996).

Until recently, it was believed that African American women, Latinas, and minority women in general do not commonly suffer from body dissatisfaction and eating disorders, because their sociocultural statuses make them less likely to develop an obsessive desire to be thin when compared to White women (Silber, 1986). Despite strong arguments against such naïve standpoints (see Thompson, 1992), eating disorders often continued to be conceptual- ized as illnesses predominantly affecting White women (Bruch, 1973; Dolan, 1991; Gordon, Perez, & Joiner, 2002). Since the 1990s, a flurry of clinical studies have demonstrated that there is a relationship between height- ened socioeconomic status and increased vulnerability to eating disorder symptoms (Lee & Lee, 2000; Polivy & Herman, 2002; Rogers, Resnick, Mitchell, & Blum, 1997). However, the findings have been inconsistent, indicating that more work should be done to tease out the complex relationships among gender, eating disorders, and social status.

This article adds to a growing body of literature show- ing how and why educated young women from various ethnicities suffer from body dissatisfaction and exhibit eating disorder symptoms. By examining women’s narra- tives about the social meanings of their body, the findings from this study contribute to our understanding of how ethnically diverse women conceptualize beauty and inter- act with mainstream body ideals. Through a detailed anal- ysis of ethnically, culturally, and socially diverse women’s experiences with body image (dis)satisfaction and dietary restraint, I elucidate how the body is used as a site to enhance social mobility and contest certain ethnic valua- tions of a gendered body.

The Symbolic Power of the Slender Body Recent cross-cultural research shows that “body image and weight concerns as well as dietary patterns have highly contextualized and locally variable meanings” (Becker, 2004, p. 536)Qualitative Health Research. For instance, psychologist and medical anthropologist Anne Becker’s work among young women living in rural Fiji sheds light on the mean- ing attached to the slender body. Becker, Burwell, Gilman, Herzog, and Hamburg (2002) found that rapid social change and exposure to Western television programs cor- responded with the adoption of a slender body image ideal and a significant increase in body dissatisfaction, disordered eating patterns, and eating disorders among young Fijian women. An in-depth analysis of 30 qualita- tive interviews revealed that Fijian women with eating disorders attempted to become socially and economically successful like the women they watched on television

programs (Becker, 2004). Becker’s findings suggested that the increase in disordered eating among Fijian women should be understood as a strategy to acquire power rather than an attempt to be thin. For Becker, Fijian women afflicted with eating disorders reshaped their self-image in the hopes of greater economic pros- perity, gender equity, and independence. To a similar degree, in Curaçao, a postcolonial island in the Caribbean, Katzman, Hermans, van Hoeken, and Hoek (2004) illus- trated how anorexia was common among mixed-ethnicity women of high socioeconomic status who had lived abroad. In their narratives, mixed-race, educated women with experiences traveling and living abroad spoke of their struggles to fit into a higher social class of pre- dominantly White people. They perceived that being thin was one of the ways by which they could gain accep- tance. It is increasingly apparent that social, cultural, and historical factors are likely to mediate women’s body (dis)satisfaction and eating behaviors.

This point is well illustrated in research conducted among ethnic minority women living in the United States. Scholars have grappled over whether ethnic minority women’s idealization of a larger body size is associated with greater body satisfaction (see Miller & Pumariega, 2001). The debate might have much to do with differing definitions of beauty ideals and concepts of self among ethnically diverse populations. For instance, following their study of body aesthetics among Black and Latina women, Rubin, Fitts, and Becker (2003) suggested that definitions of beauty move beyond the physical body to encompass embodied ways of being and acting. An in-depth analysis of a focus group with 18 college- educated African American and Latina women indicated that they defined beauty as body ethics, or “values and beliefs regarding care and appreciation of diverse body types” (p. 55). These women had an attitude of “self- acceptance and body nurturance.” By rejecting main- stream representations of beauty, one is able to stay “true to oneself,” upholding individual cultural values and ide- als, reinforcing positive attitudes toward good health and well-being (p. 70). As these and other authors—including Nichter (2000) and Parker et al. (1995)—have demon- strated, Latina and African American women express and embody beauty in ways that boldly challenge and move beyond rigid physical descriptions of the aesthetically appealing body to include attitude, style, and presentation of self.

In this article I build on these earlier studies, and explore the social meaning of the body and how it is used as a vehicle for social mobility. The analysis is grounded in the works of Pierre Bourdieu (1984), who eloquently pointed out that the body is a symbolic marker of class, and signifies social distinction. Bourdieu discussed the social processes and everyday practices that define

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individual persons and social distinction, which is accomplished through the accumulation of symbolic capital (e.g., money, education, and social networks). The body, in a Bourdieuian framework, thus acts as a commodity or medium through which certain kinds of capital are acquired. Bourdieu wrote:

The body is the most indisputable materialization of class tastes, which it manifests in several ways. It does this first in the seemingly most natural fea- tures of the body, the dimensions (volume, height, weight) and shapes (round or square, stiff or sup- ple, straight or curved) of its visible forms, which express in countless ways a whole relation to the body, i.e., a way of treating it, caring for it, feeding it, maintaining it, which reveals the deepest dispo- sitions of the habitus. (1984, p. 190)

According to Bourdieu, the body acts as a commodity or medium through which certain kinds of capital and power are articulated, and where esteemed cultural values are encoded. The women’s narratives presented in this article illuminate how attaining a slender body—a form of power—is a means by which women of diverse ethnici- ties and social classes can overcome inequalities in every- day social relationships and interactions. Focusing on the mundane and ordinary—the social reality most taken for granted—these women’s narratives offer rich insight into the complexities of the ways that being thin is a mecha- nism that women utilize to gain a sense of belonging and acceptance in American society.

Methods In this study, I employed a feminist methodological framework and collected life histories from 18 college- educated women. The interviews were guided by a semi- structured interview protocol, with several questions intended to bring out descriptions of the women’s life experiences related to the social meaning of the body. I asked the young women to talk about their family life; the communities in which they grew up; their adoles- cence, education, and social interactions; and involve- ment with peers. In addition, I asked women who immigrated to the United States and women who were born into ethnically diverse families to further explain their experiences of being exposed to more than one cul- ture (i.e., their parents’ native cultures and American culture, or their own native culture and American cul- ture). I also gathered what I refer to as “body narratives,” which encouraged women to talk about their relationship to food and their bodies, and elicited information on women’s perceived beauty ideals as well as dieting prac- tices. This technique permitted an in-depth exploration of

how media imagery and mainstream ideas about beauty influence women’s dietary choices and relationships to their bodies. In the process of collecting body narratives, several women recounted their history with food-related troubles. These women’s narratives tell how they saw the thin body as a way to gain social acceptance and eventu- ally to improve their relations with others. During the interviews I did not use a voice recorder, but maintained the integrity of women’s narratives by transcribing the field notes as soon as possible after the interview and immediately expanding on the notes.1 As the women spoke, I recorded as much detail as possible, including descriptions of the women—facial expressions, tones, unspoken communication, demeanor—and verbatim quotes. Additionally, I recorded my impressions and interpretation of the emotional condition of the young women before, during, and after the interview (Dewalt & Dewalt, 2002).

As a White, educated woman, I recognized that a criti- cal and reflective approach to the research process was crucial in the study of ethnic minority women. As Adamson and Donovan (2002) stated, “The production of reflexive accounts is essential in all qualitative research projects but particularly in research involving ethnic minorities or ‘other’ groups” (p. 823). Utilizing a femi- nist framework allowed me to examine how my own sub- jectivity influenced the interview process and later my interpretation of the results. Feminist psychological researchers Tolman and Szalacha (1999) addressed this approach in their work: “This psychological approach to data analysis is accomplished in part because this method is explicitly relational, in that the researcher brings her self-knowledge into the process of listening by using clinical methods of empathy to contribute to her under- standing of what a girl is saying” (p. 14). This approach placed the young woman as the focus of the inquiries, actively allowing her to construct her story. At the same time, it made me critically aware of how my own life his- tory and subjective biases influence the research process. This methodological approach moved away from homog- enizing women, and highlighted their lived experiences.

The young women in this study were chosen based on their ethnicity and educational status. I used purposive sampling (nonrandomized selection), as well as snowball sampling, a technique that involves referrals by other par- ticipants, to recruit ethnically diverse women (Bernard, 2002). All the young women in the study were under- graduate university students between the ages of 18 and 24 attending the same public, 4-year institution located in the northeastern United States. Three of the women in the study were current students of mine. To overcome the power differences embedded in the student–teacher rela- tionship, which can influence the results by creating com- munication barriers, I conducted interviews with these

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students near the end of the semester, or after the completion of the term (see Geiger, 1990). Other young women were recruited through a variety of student organizations including, but not limited to, the Puerto Rican/Latin American Cultural Center, Asian American Cultural Center, Black Students Association, and West Indian Student Awareness Organization. The research was not limited to women who self-identified or who were clini- cally diagnosed as having or having had an eating disor- der. The study was reviewed and received full ethical approval from the University of Connecticut Institutional Review Board prior to the start of the research. At the beginning of each interview, I informed each young woman of my reasons for conducting the research. All women were informed that the information they shared was anonymous and confidential. Additionally, each woman was aware that she could withdraw from the interview process at any point without providing an explanation. Consent was obtained prior to the start of the interview. Pseudonyms are used throughout the article to protect women’s identities and maintain confidentiality.

Throughout this article I use the term ethnically diverse women to encompass the varied ways that these women self-identified, which included White (7 parti- cipants), Hispanic (3 participants), Persian, Filipino, Jamaican, Vietnamese, Peruvian, Black Puerto Rican, Indian Italian, and Asian Indian. The women from ethnic minorities were either born into an immigrant family or had immigrated to the United States during their child- hood or adolescence with their families; in one case, a young woman immigrated by herself. Six of the 11 ethnic minority women were not born in the United States, and an additional 5 indicated that their parents were foreign- born and had immigrated to the United States prior to the informant’s birth. Ethnic minority women who said that they or their parents had lived in another country prior to living in the United States discussed their affiliation with their country of origin; they maintained varying degrees of connection with the home country. One woman was born in the United States to American-born parents (the mother grew up in Brazil), yet immediately after her birth moved to Costa Rica, where she lived until she was five. This woman described herself as possessing a Latin American rather than Euro-American heritage. The six participants who had exposure to two different countries indicated that they maintained connections to their coun- try of origin through visits and interactions with family members living there. It is important to indicate the length of time these immigrant women had spent in American society. I did this by differentiating between women who were first-generation immigrants to the United States and women who were second-generation immigrants born to immigrant families in the United States. All seven of the White women in the study were born and raised in the

United States. The women’s ages ranged from 18 to 23, and the mean age was 20. Social class was self-assessed and ranged from working class (1 participant) to upper- middle class (2 participants), with the other 15 partici- pants identifying as middle class. The heterogeneity of the group allowed for a wide range of perspectives and experiences.

The findings are structured using an analysis of the contradictions, conflicts, and struggles that were present in women’s lives, enabling underlying patterns and theo- retical concepts to arise from women’s narratives (Strauss & Corbin, 1990). I developed a codebook to highlight patterns and ideas that emerged from the themes. In cod- ing the interviews I sought theoretical saturation, which means that neither new cultural data nor new relation- ships between variables emerged from within the wom- en’s narrations (Bernard, 2002, p. 471). In the case of nonsaturation, I conducted subsequent interviews so that theoretical saturation was reached and no new themes were discovered.

Findings Ethnically diverse women talked about the struggles, ten- sions, and conflicting expectations they faced growing up and entering American society. An in-depth exploration of women’s lives indicated that body (dis)satisfaction was intricately connected to feelings of belonging and accep- tance. The thread linking many of the women’s narratives was the symbolic power that the slender body engendered, an image that women tended to either desire or reject.

Feminist scholar Susan Bordo (1993) wrote that in contemporary consumer culture, cultural beauty ideals perpetuate the image of the slender body as the epitome of ideal femininity. The slender body is encoded with images of control, achievement, and success—culturally esteemed values specific to womanhood in consumer societies. Bordo contended that the slender body is homogenized, depicting a dominant gender, class, and ethnic type. In line with Bordo’s work, the women in the present study reproduced images that reinforced the notion that the het- erosexual, middle- to upper-class White woman is the cul- tural prototype of ideal feminine beauty in American society. Regardless of their ethnic, socioeconomic, and cultural backgrounds, women in the study expressed their conflicts dealing with messages promulgated by the media and endorsed by American society, in which thinness and whiteness symbolize beauty and ideal femininity.

Accepting or Rejecting the Slender “White” Body Ideal Bordo’s (1993) depiction of femininity was echoed in several women’s narratives, reinforcing that the slender

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White body was a pervasive image in these women’s daily lives. Some women explicitly expressed their own desires for this body image, using references to Hollywood movie stars and other celebrities who possessed desirable physical characteristics and who, by extension, embodied power and prestige. For instance, ethnically diverse women reproduced an anglicized image of beauty in which the ideal woman possessed a light skin color (white, tan, or “not too dark”), light eyes (blue, green, or hazel), and light-colored (blonde or light brown) straight hair. Consider the description of an ideal woman given by Lisa, a young White woman of middle- to upper-class background. She excitedly talked about Jessica Simpson2 as her ideal:

Her chest is medium sized, and her body in general is really nice. . . . Her hair color [blonde] is really great, but you know it’s impossible to get. Jessica’s hair is actually darker, like dirty blonde, but she treats it so often, and it’s really expensive. They [a cable television station] said she takes extrava- gant lengths to get her hair that color, and that it really isn’t pure blonde.

Lisa was enthusiastic when she spoke of her idealized image of beauty. She shared her knowledge of the prac- tices Jessica Simpson engaged in to become beautiful. Lisa also had blonde hair, which she frequently had treated at a hair salon. Her subtle comparison of herself to Jessica Simpson reinforced that the slender, anglicized body was the ideal that she strove for; yet, Lisa was aware that this body is nearly impossible to achieve, because it is expensive and individuals must engage in “extravagant” beauty practices to achieve the desired results. Despite the impossibility of attaining this ideal, she dyed her hair, strictly monitored her diet, and exercised. Lisa was able to engage in these beauty regimes and self-disciplinary practices because she had access to the resources neces- sary to cultivate the highly desirable yet decidedly rare body image. She had the financial resources, leisure time, and knowledge of the practices that she must engage in to achieve this ideal. By embodying the slender White body, Lisa possessed social capital, which was visible in the contours of her body as well as in the ways in which she adorned her body. Near the end of our discussion, Lisa stated with an air of confidence, “I buy designer clothes. You get a better fit, and your clothes aren’t the same as everyone else’s.” Through daily food, body, and con- sumer practices, Lisa was able to elevate her social status and prestige by molding her body into an image that encodes dominant gender ideology and embodies social distinction. Qualitative Health Research

Abby, a Black Puerto Rican woman who grew up in a “snobby,” upper-middle-class neighborhood, similarly

emphasized whiteness in descriptions of ideal feminine beauty. Her narrative echoed Lisa’s, and adds to under- standing of the complexity with which thinness and whiteness are embedded in women’s definitions of beauty and experiences of their bodies. When Abby was asked to discuss her image of the ideal woman, she responded, “She should have a natural tan, not too dark and not too light; green or hazel eyes; and straight hair.” She contin- ued to state, “I hate curly hair, because I have curly hair.” Abby idealized lighter shades and hues of beauty. She was not alone, as many women in the study talked about lighter-skinned women who had long, straight, light- colored hair, light eyes, and a glistening tan as the epit- ome of beauty. Frizzy, kinky, or curly hair (nonstraight hair) deviates from White standards of beauty, which can become, for some women, a source of conflict and anxi- ety (Patton, 2006). The desire for long, flowing, straight, and preferably blonde (or lighter) hair—which, as Lisa pointed out, requires time and money—pervades women’s depictions of beauty in American society (see Nicther, 2000; Nichter & Vuckovic, 1994). Desiring beauty based on the standards of the so-called ideal White woman was a theme connecting many of the young women’s voices, and was not specifically linked to ethnicity and/or social class. This begs the question: What do lighter shades of skin; soft, smooth, and sleek hair; and a svelte figure offer ethnically diverse women? Does the slender body engen- der social distinction, and by extension, wealth and power?

Jessica, a White woman from a lower-middle-class background, provided insight into the complexities of desiring the White, slender body. As she explained, the “skinny girl” possesses valued personality characteris- tics: “Skinny girls . . . are always portrayed as the sexy, intelligent, successful, and in-control women.” The oppo- site of the skinny girl is the chubby or fat girl who, as Jessica explained, is “fat, funny, and clumsy.” Most note- worthy is that Jessica conflated slenderness with social, sexual, intellectual, personal, and economic success, so that being slender raised one’s social status. She was well aware that the fat body does not offer the same level of prestige. This point was clarified when Jessica stated, “If someone calls me fat, I get upset.” In American society, the fat body is seen as possessing an “incorrect attitude,” symbolizes a body out of control, and is situated at the bottom of the hierarchy of valued body ideals (Bordo, 1993, p. 203). Lisa’s comments align with Becker’s (2004) findings that the slender female body embodies positive attributes, and that cultivating a culturally valued aesthetic body ideal is a method to experience social rewards and improved social positioning. Desiring slen- der bodies because of the esteem they embody is prob- lematic, however. As Lisa articulated, a young woman’s self-worth is inexorably linked to the size and shape of

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her body. In line with Jessica, many other women associ- ated the “skinny girl” with positive characteristics, expressing their desires to mold their bodies and selves into the images that pervade their daily lives. As the women discussed above illustrate, in American society, “The current standard of beauty is a White, young, slim, tall, and upper class woman” (Patton, 2006 p. 30), an image that unfortunately marginalizes other forms of femininity and female beauty.

Not all women idealize the White, slender body. Several women contested the uncritical consumption of media images that promote thinness as the feminine ideal. Kantha, who is Jamaican, mocked the image of the slen- der White girl. She said, “The skinny White girl has the attitude of ‘I’m perfect.’” Kantha lived in Jamaica until early adolescence, and then moved to a low-income Puerto Rican community. As a first generation immigrant woman, she rejected such oppressive images of the “White girl,” and talked about how beauty is fluid and encompasses both inner and outer beauty. Kantha out- lined her culture’s notions of beauty, comparing Jamaican women’s beauty ideals and American models of beauty: in the United States, the emphasis is rigidly limited to types of physical beauty, and there is little emphasis on inner beauty. In America, Kantha explained, “[t]he White girl is tall and skinny and blond”; she is also “perfect.” In addition, Kantha elaborated that White girls “have a firmer body, and a flat stomach.” Regarding Jamaican culture, she said,

We are into appearance, but there are different kinds of outer beauty. In the States it’s about being skinny, and there is more of an emphasis on outer physical beauty, and we don’t emphasize it as much. It’s different—a more curvaceous body type. Ideally, the female is curvy, has a big butt, big boobs [breasts], everything is big. . . . Black girls might want a flat stomach, but they don’t want to be too skinny. . . . Just because you’re thinner doesn’t mean you are good on the inside.

Similarly, Adriana, who was born in Peru and moved to the United States at the age of 13, expressed a comparable definition of beauty. For her, beauty extended beyond the body: “Appearance is important, but it’s about style.” She described that there are “Black” clothes, “like ghetto style,” and “White” clothes.3 Adriana named the “high- end” stores where “White” clothes could be bought. For her and many other non-White women, beauty depended on style and what they decide to put on their body—not the size and shape of their body.

Adriana, a first-generation immigrant woman, rejected outright the White beauty codes. She explained why: When she entered American society as an adolescent she

immediately recognized her already devalued position as an ethnic minority, and refused to be further denigrated. She continued to idealize a voluptuous body image that coincided with her notions of beauty, and contested hege- monic Western beauty codes. The value Adriana placed on her ethno-specific body ideal was revealed in the fol- lowing comment: “Minorities are much more accepting of bigger bodies. Blacks and Hispanics want big butts, hips, a different body type altogether.” According to Andriana, White girls “are like clones,” and they succumb to pres- sures of the media. She indicated that the media cause many White women to develop anorexia. As a woman of minority status who had to overcome oppressive racial, ethnic, and cultural barriers living in American society, she asserted, “I have my own personality. I live up to my own expectations. I don’t conform to society, because we’ve done it for so long.” Adriana openly criticized White women and their “weakness,” suggesting that they do not have the strength of personality to reject dominant and oppressive images of beauty. It is their weakness that also contributes to their body dissatisfaction and eating pathologies. Often, African American and ethnic minority women are pitted against the dominant cultural standard of beauty, contributing to oppression and marginalization (Patton, 2006). Adriana’s words echoed other ethnic minority women who asserted their agency by challenging mainstream beauty norms. Several women rejected the slender body and refused to comply with constraints imposed by the dominant White culture, ultimately exhib- iting their social power through their identification with ethno-specific body images that embraced diverse notions of beauty. Qualitative Health Research

Women of African, Latina, and Philippino cultural backgrounds not only talked about the curvaceous body as beautiful, but also how a woman presents herself through her hair style, attitude, and fashion to reveal her overall beauty. This is consistent with Nichter’s (2000) and Rubin et al.’s (2003) findings that body size is not the sole indi- cator of beauty, but taking care of the body and presenting themselves positively frames some women’s definitions of beauty. Similar to body ethics, the term employed by the women of color in the study by Rubin et al., these women’s notion of beauty rejected “the dominant cultural ethos that encourages women to reshape their bodies to emulate the cultural ideal” (p. 70). Several women in my study proudly identified with their minority status, assert- ing that their ideas of beauty differ from mainstream rep- resentations of the “White girl,” and promote a more extensive and expressive notion of female beauty Qualitative Health Research.

Discussion: Mediation and Moderation

Discussion: Mediation and Moderation

Mediator and moderator are important in research because most research focuses on the relationship between two variables which are independent variables (IV) and dependent variables (DV). With these variables there are many possible outcomes. According to Baron, R.M, & Kenny, D.A. (1986), states that a mediator variable is one that explains the relationship between the two other variables and the moderator variable is one that influences the strength of a relationship between two other variables. Mediator and moderator are the names that are given to the third variable effects Discussion: Mediation and Moderation.

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Taking into consideration the following examples of research findings, high satisfaction with one’s direct supervisor leads to lower levels of employee turnover. In other words, employees who are highly satisfied with their direct supervisor are less likely to leave an organization than employees who are dissatisfied with their direct supervisor (DeConinck, 2009), the moderator variable predicts that the employees who are satisfied highly with their direct supervisor will be less likely to leave the organization. The mediator variable is explaining that the employees who are less satisfied with their direct supervisor are likely to leave the organization than those that are highly satisfied.

In high levels of parental reading are associated with faster cognitive development in young children. In other words, children who are read to more by their parents show faster cognitive development than children who are read to less often (National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, 2007)Discussion: Mediation and Moderation, the moderator variable predicts that children whose parents read less to them will not develop cognitively in comparison to those whose parents do read more to them.

The experience of being socially excluded leads to increases in aggressive behavior. Research has found that when people are excluded by others, they are more likely to behave aggressively, even to people who did not initially exclude them (Twenge, Baumeister, Tice, & Stucke, 2001)Discussion: Mediation and Moderation.

The moderator variable predicts that those with aggressive behaviors are excluded. The mediator variable explains that have been excluded have aggressive behavior towards the ones that did not initially get excluded.

Defendants who wear glasses are less likely to be convicted by juries as being guilty of committing violent crimes (Brown, Henriquez, & Groscup, 2008), there is no apparent moderator as far as the mediator is concerned it is the committing of the violent crimes which tries to explain that the changing the type of crime would have an effect but that violent crimes are important to the independent variable Discussion: Mediation and Moderation.

Discussion: Drug Policies and Ethics

Discussion: Drug Policies and Ethics

The NASW Code of Ethics provides social workers with guidelines and standards for interacting with clients, colleagues, communities, and society, as a whole. These standards govern interactions and professional behavior of social work practitioners. The NASW has also developed specific standards, which are published in the NASW Standards for Social Work Practice With Clients With Substance Use Disorders. These standards emphasize the importance of the competence of social workers. The standards indicate that social workers should be knowledgeable of evidence-based interventions for substance disorders. The confidentiality standard becomes essential as social workers must be informed and comply with federal, state, and local laws about substance use, as well as third-party payee regulations. Discussion: Drug Policies and Ethics

For this Discussion, review this week’s resources, including the case Working with Clients with Dual Diagnosis: The Case of Joe,and consider how social policies affect Joe’s circumstances as described in the case study. Then, think about any gaps in service you found in Joe’s case. Finally, reflect on how you might address these gaps or make changes to the policies that affect Joe.

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·      Post an explanation of how drug policies affect Joe’s circumstances, as described in the case study.
 
·      Then, explain any gaps in service you found in Joe’s case as a result of the drug policies described in the case study.

 ·      Finally, describe a strategy you might use to address these gaps or make changes to the policies that affect Joe.

 

Support your post with specific references to the resources. Be sure to provide full APA citations for your references.

 

References

 

Plummer, S.-B., Makris, S., & Brocksen, S. M. (Eds.). (2014). Social work case studies: Foundation year. Baltimore: MD: Laureate International Universities Publishing. [Vital Source e-reader].

“Working with Clients with Dual Diagnosis: The Case of Joe” (pp. 77–78)

 

Popple, P. R., & Leighninger, L. (2015). The policy-based profession: An introduction to social welfare policy analysis for social workers. (6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education.

 

Humphreys, K., & McLellan, A. T. (2011). A policy-oriented review of strategies for improving the outcomes of services for substance use disorder patients. Addiction, 106(12), 2058–2066. Discussion: Drug Policies and Ethics

Working With Clients With Dual Diagnosis: The Case of Joe

Joe is a 34-year-old, Caucasian male who came to the County Division of Social Services to apply for General Assistance (GA) benefits. The GA program provides cash assistance, Medicaid coverage, and housing for homeless single adults. Joe is in need of Medicaid benefits in order to remain active in his treatment program. Joe is receiving treatment at the Mentally Ill Chemical Abuser (MICA) partial hospitalization program at the local community mental health center for clients who are dually diagnosed. Joe has a dependence on marijuana, although he has stopped using it for approximately six months, and has been diagnosed with major depressive disorder. He is being prescribed medication.

Joe reports that he is unable to work due to mental illness, and without an income or health insurance, he is unable to obtain his medication. Joe reports that while he was enrolled as a student at the state university, he would sell marijuana to other college students. Eventually, he was arrested and convicted of possession with intent to distribute a controlled dangerous substance (CDS) and served 3 years in prison. Joe has had no further arrests; however, he has not been able to secure permanent housing or employment since his release.

Joe reports that this event has ruined his life. His lack of employment results from an inability to pass most background checks. If he discloses that he was arrested, Joe reports that he is never called for interviews. But when he once failed to disclose the information to the prospective employer, Joe was terminated for lying on his application. Joe believes that he has little hope for future employment. Discussion: Drug Policies and Ethics

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Joe has few natural supports in his life. He reports that following the incarceration, his family distanced itself from him and his girlfriend at the time broke up with him. He reports that his only supports are his local Narcotics Anonymous (NA) sponsor and his mental health counselor. Joe reports that his housing situation has been unstable and sporadic for the past 10 years.

Joe’s mental health counselor from the MICA program has contacted me to advocate for Joe’s approval for benefits. I explained that under the current state regulations, Joe is ineligible for benefits due to his CDS distribution conviction. The only program options that I can offer him are food stamps and access to a homeless shelter outside of the county. The counselor explained that relocation would cause a disruption to Joe’s mental health treatment and would cause him to lose contact with his local NA sponsor.

In response to the counselor’s concerns, I suggested that Joe contact the local faith-based organization for assistance. Although they do not house single males, they have an extensive network of volunteers, mentors, and donors who may financially support people in need. I referred Joe to a program that offers bonding to people seeking employment who have been previously incarcerated. Finally, I suggested that the counselor research Joe’s ability to remain in treatment at the hospital despite his lack of Medicaid coverage. The counselor agreed to assist Joe with these suggestions Discussion: Drug Policies and Ethics.

 

DISCUSSION: Theories of Life-Span Development

DISCUSSION: Theories of Life-Span Development

Zastrow and Kirst-Ashman (2016) stated, “We need theories to guide our thinking and our work so that we may undertake research-informed practice” (p. 127-128). At the same time, the authors asserted, “No theory will be perfectly applicable. Perhaps you will decide that only one or two concepts make any sense to you in terms of working with clients” (p. 128). Though you may be able to apply only a few concepts in a particular theory to your work with clients, as a social worker, you should be applying evidence-based research to your work. Empirically-based developmental theories may guide you as you assess clients and their presenting problems. You may also apply developmental theories to your treatment decisions.

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For this Assignment, you discuss theories of life-span development by evaluating a theory that seems especially relevant to you and your role as a social worker. Select a theory of life-span development to address in this Discussion. This may be a theory described in the resources of this course, or you may select a theory based on personal research. Locate at least one scholarly resource (not included in the course resources) that addresses the theory you selected. DISCUSSION: Theories of Life-Span Development

·      Post a Discussion in which you analyze the theory of life-span development that you selected.
 
·      Summarize the theory; then, identify the strengths and weaknesses of this theory, especially as it relates to social work practice.

 ·      Explain one way you might apply the theory to your social work practice.

 

Be sure to support your posts with specific references to the resources. If you are using additional articles, be sure to provide full APA-formatted citations for your references.

References

 

Dybicz, P. (2012). The hero(ine) on a journey: A postmodern conceptual framework for social work practice. Journal of Social Work Education, 48(2), 267–283.

 

Villadsen, K. (2008). ‘Polyphonic’ welfare: Luhmann’s systems theory applied to modern social work. International Journal of Social Welfare,17(1), 65–73.

Zastrow, C. H., & Kirst-Ashman, K. K. (2016). Understanding human behavior and the social environment (10th ed.)Boston, MA:  Cengage Learning DISCUSSION: Theories of Life-Span Development

 

Psychology homework help

Psychology homework help

1. Responded to message below. Should be at least 250 words. Responses should be informative and contribute to advancing knowledge of the topic. Include at least 2 APA-cited references.

Frank, Greitzer & Holimer (2011) makes powerful augments about the difficulties surrounding the trail before the fact. I agree with them. It really is difficult to determine if threats are bogus and if they should be taken seriously. However, once a threat is made it must be taken seriously and that it is highly possible for the individual to carry out their plan. It is also difficult to know the individual’s state of mind or if the individual has psychological issues. Frank, Greitzer & Holimer (2011) states, “there are several factors that should taken into consideration regarding picking up the trail before the fact, (a) the lack of sufficient real-world data that has “ground truth” adequate scientific verification and validate of proposed solutions; (b) the difficulty in distinguishing between malicious insider behavior and what can be described as normal or legitimate behavior (c) the potential quantity of data, and the resultant number of “associations” or relationships that may emerge produce enormous scalability challenges; and (d) despite ample evidence suggesting that in a preponderance of cases, the perpetrator exhibited observable ‘concerning behaviors’. All threats should be taken into account and noted as warning signals and reported to the proper authorities. Psychology homework help

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Sometimes the most damage is done by individuals who had a personal insight into the company or one who became disgruntled. They know the outs an ins of the organization and how to cause the most damage. I also agree that the methods and skills of the perpetrators have changed in recent years. With all of the new technology, the generations have become wiser and smarter. Therefore, all threats should be observed.

2. Responded to message below. Should be at least 250 words. Responses should be informative and contribute to advancing knowledge of the topic. Include at least 2 APA-cited references.

What Frank, Greitzer & Hohimer (2011) argue about difficulties of picking up the trail before the fact, in order to provide time to intervene and prevent an insider cyber attack?
I agree with Greitzer and Hohimer that insider threat is a serious concern for cyber security that has to be addressed successfully. Unfortunately this is much easier said than done. The nature of insider threat makes it very difficult to detect and as Grietzer and Hohimer (2011) point out, there is a lack of real world data, it is difficult to differentiate between normal and abnormal behavior, there would be scalability challenges in data collected and no one has really decided to tackle this issue with technology yet (p.27). This means that devising a way to identify an insider threat prior to that insider launching an attack is a task that will not be easy to complete. That doesn’t mean that this is not a goal that we should be working towards, quite the opposite actually. This is something that should be given attention and professionals should be working on methods that can help catch insider threats before the damage is done.  Psychology homework help
Do you agree with them? Why? Why not?
I do agree with Greitzer and Hohimer that insider threat is a big problem. I also agree that there is a lack of data that can be used to help identify patterns and help develop methods and technology that can catch insider threat early. I have to admit that much of what they discussed in the article was a bit over my head. I don’t fully understand how the technology they discussed would work and I also can’t say that I believe that a technological solution would the perfect solution for this issue. Humans can be very unpredictable. This means that any technology developed to be an early identifier of insider threat will not work every time. I do think that more often than not there will be indicators prior to an insider attack occurring but there is always that chance that someone just snaps. With that being said I do think that there should still be research and work done to mitigate the risk of insider attacks. Psychology homework help

Quantification: 2 Pages

Case Study the treatment plan

Case Study the treatment plan

Carefully read over the following case and then, using your DSM-5, complete the

form that follows, all the way through the treatment plan. Take the time and

explore differential diagnosis, cultural factors, life experience, and

circumstances. There may not be enough information provided within the case to

substantially fill in all of the area of the form, but try to be thorough. Case Study the treatment plan

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Nancy Ingram, a 33-year old stock analyst and married mother of two children,

was brought to the emergency room (ER) after 10 days of what her husband

described as “another cycle of dark days.” His wife was tearful, then explosive,

and she had almost no sleep.

Ms. Ingram’s husband said he had decided to bring her to the ER after he

discovered that she had recently created a blog entitled Nancy Ingram’s Best Stock

Picks. Such an activity not only was out of character but, given her job as a stock

analyst for a large investment bank, was strictly against company policy.

Mr. Ingram said his wife was working on the stock picks around the clock,

forgoing her own meals as well as her responsibilities at work and with her

children. Ms. Ingram argued with her husband at this time and said, her blog

“would make them rich.” Case Study the treatment plan

The patient had first been diagnosed with depression in college, after the death of

her father from suicide. On examination, the patient was pacing angrily in the

exam room. Her eyes appeared glazed and unfocused. She responded to the

examiner’s entrance by sitting down and explaining that this was all a

miscommunication, that she was fine and needed to get home immediately to tend

to her business. She was speaking so rapidly, it was difficult for the examiner to

interrupt. Case Study the treatment plan

She denied hallucinations, but admitted with a smile, to a unique ability to predict

the stock market. She refused to be cognitively tested and she said, “I will not be a

trained seal, a guinea pig, or a barking dog, thank you very much, and may I leave

now?”

Case Formulation • Presenting problem – What is the client’s problem list? –

What are DSM diagnoses?

• Predisposing factors – Over the person’s lifetime, what factors contributed to the

development of the problem? – Think biopsychosocial

•Precipitants – Why now? – What are triggers or events that exacerbated the

problem?

• Perpetuating factors – What factors are likely to maintain the problem? – Are

there issues that the problem will worsen, if not addressed

• Protective/positive factors – What are client strengths that can be drawn upon? –

Are there any social supports or community resources ? Case Study the treatment plan

Assessment For Client With Disorder

Assessment For Client With Disorder

Kyle was a 12-year-old boy who reluctantly agreed to admission to a psychiatric unit after getting arrested for breaking into a grocery store. His mother said she was “exhausted,” adding that it was hard to raise a boy who “doesn’t know the rules.”

Beginning as a young child, Kyle was unusually aggressive, bullying other children and taking their things. When confronted by his mother, stepfather, or a teacher, he had long tended to curse, punch, and show no concern for possible punishment. Disruptive, impulsive, and “fidgety,” Kyle was diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and placed in a special education program by second grade. He began to see a psychiatrist in fourth grade for weekly psychotherapy and medications (quetiapine and dexmethylphenidate). He was adherent only sporadically with both the medication and the therapy. When asked, he said his psychiatrist was “stupid.” Assessment For Client With Disorder

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During the year prior to the admission, he had been caught stealing from school lockers (a cell phone, a jacket, a laptop computer), disciplined after “mugging” a classmate for his wallet, and suspended after multiple physical fights with classmates. He had been arrested twice for these behaviors. His mother and teachers agreed that although he could be charming to strangers, people quickly caught on to the fact that he was a “con artist.” Kyle was consistently unremorseful, externalizing of blame, and uninterested in the feelings of others. He was disorganized, was inattentive and uninterested in instructions, and constantly lost his possessions. He generally did not do his homework, and when he did, his performance was erratic. When confronted about his poor performance, he tended to say, “And what are you going to do, shoot me?” Kyle, his mother, and his teachers agreed that he was a loner and not well liked by his peers. Assessment For Client With Disorder

Kyle lived with his mother, stepfather, and two younger half-siblings. His stepfather was unemployed, and his mother worked part-time as a cashier in a grocery store. His biological father was in prison for drug possession. Both biological grandfathers had a history of alcohol dependence.

Kyle’s early history was normal. The pregnancy was uneventful, and he reached all of his milestones on time. There was no history of sexual or physical abuse. Kyle had no known medical problems, alcohol or substance abuse, or participation in gang activities. He had not been caught with weapons, had not set fires, and had not been seen as particularly cruel to other children or animals. He had been regularly truant from school but had neither run away nor stayed away from home until late at night.

When interviewed on the psychiatric unit, Kyle was casually groomed and appeared his stated age of 12. He was fidgety and made sporadic eye contact with the interviewer. He said he was “mad” and insisted he would rather be in jail than on a psychiatric unit. His speech was loud but coherent, goal directed, and of normal rate. His affect was irritable and angry. He denied suicidal or homicidal ideation. He denied psychotic symptoms. He denied feeling depressed. He had no obvious cognitive deficits but declined more formal testing. His insight was limited, and his judgment was poor by history. Assessment For Client With Disorder

Diagnoses

· Conduct disorder, childhood-onset type, severe, with limited prosocial emotions

· Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder

Discussion

Kyle is a 12-year-old boy who was brought to a psychiatric unit after getting caught breaking into a grocery store. He has a lengthy history of behaviors that violate the rights of others. These behaviors deviate significantly from age-appropriate societal norms and have caused social, academic, and functional impairment. He has a disorder of conduct.

In DSM-5, the criteria for conduct disorder (CD) are organized into four categories of behavior: aggression to people and animals, destruction of property, deceitfulness or theft, and serious violations of rules. A CD diagnosis requires three or more specific behaviors out of the 15 that are listed within these four categories. The behaviors must have been present in the last 12 months, with at least one criterion present in the prior 6 months. Kyle has at least seven of the 15: bullying, fighting, stealing (with and without confrontation), break-ins, lying, and truancy. Assessment For Client With Disorder

Kyle also has a history of comorbid DSM-5 ADHD, as evidenced by persistent symptoms of hyperactivity, restlessness, impulsivity, and inattention. ADHD is found in about 20% of youth with CD. The criteria for the two disorders are relatively distinct, although both entities present with pathological levels of impulsivity.

DSM-5 includes multiple specifiers that allow CD to be further subdivided. Kyle’s behavior began before age 10, which places him in the category of childhood-onset type as opposed to adolescent-onset type. There is also an unspecified-onset designation, used when information is inadequate to clarify whether the behaviors began before age 10. When trying to identify the age at onset, the clinician should seek multiple sources of information and recall that estimates are often 2 years later than actual onset. People with an early age at onset—like Kyle—are more likely to be male, to be aggressive, and to have impaired peer relationships. They are also more likely to have comorbid ADHD and to go on to have adulthoods marked by criminal behavior and substance use disorders. In contrast, CD that manifests between ages 10 and 16 (onset is rare after age 16) tends to be milder, and most individuals go on to achieve adequate social and occupational adjustment as adults. Both groups have an elevated risk, however, of many psychiatric disorders.

The second DSM-5 specifier for CD relates to the presence (or absence) of callous and unemotional traits. The “limited prosocial emotions” specifier requires the persistent presence of two or more of the following: lack of remorse or guilt; lack of empathy; lack of concern about performance; and shallow or deficient affect. Kyle has a history of disregard for the feelings of others, appears unconcerned about his performance (“What are you going to do, shoot me?”), and shows no remorse for his actions. This label applies to only a minority of people with CD and is associated with aggression and fearless thrill seeking. Assessment For Client With Disorder

A third specifier for CD relates to the severity of symptoms. Lying and staying out past a curfew might qualify a person for mild CD. Vandalism or stealing without confrontation might lead to a diagnosis of moderate CD. Kyle’s behaviors would qualify for the severe subtype.

Multiple other aspects of Kyle’s history are useful to understanding his situation. His father is in prison for substance use and/or dealing. Both of his biological grandfathers have histories of alcohol abuse. His mother and stepfather are underemployed, although details about the stepfather are unknown. In general, CD risk has been found to be increased in families with criminal records, conduct disorder, and substance abuse, as well as mood, anxiety, and schizophrenia spectrum disorders. Environment also contributes, both in regard to chaotic early child-rearing and, later, to living in a dangerous, threatening neighborhood.

Kyle’s diagnosis of conduct disorder is an example of how diagnoses can evolve over the course of a lifetime. His earlier behavior warranted a diagnosis of DSM-5 oppositional defiant disorder (ODD), which is characterized by a pattern of negative, hostile, and defiant behaviors that are usually directed at an authority figure (e.g., parent or teacher) and may cause significant distress in social or academic settings. However, ODD cannot be diagnosed if CD is present. As he enters adolescence, Kyle is at risk for many psychiatric disorders, including mood, anxiety, and substance abuse disorders. Of particular concern is the possibility that his aggression, theft, and rules violations will persist and his diagnosis of conduct disorder will shift in adulthood to antisocial personality disorder.

· What can be gleaned from the assessments that have already been performed (if applicable)? If this client came into your office, what assessments would you perform (perhaps ones from the text that were not mentioned in the case)? Assessment For Client With Disorder  

Decoding The Ethics Code

Decoding The Ethics Code

Respond in 1000 words with three or more scholarly references. Use citations, cite your references. Please use attachment to answer question. Cite every sentence with content from your sources. There are a few ways to do that including just putting the citation at the end of each sentence.  

What did you find most interesting or “surprising” about the attachment

In their work-related activities, psychologists do not engage in unfair discrimination based on age,

gender, gender identity, race, ethnicity, culture, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, disability, Decoding The Ethics Code

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socioeconomic status, or any basis proscribed by law.

Psychologists respect the dignity and worth of all people and appropriately consider

the relevance of personal characteristics based on factors such as age, gender,

gender identity, race, ethnicity, culture, national origin, religion, sexual orientation,

disability, or socioeconomic status (Principle E: Respect for People’s Rights and

Dignity). Much of the work of psychologists entails making valid discriminating

judgments that best serve the people and organizations they work with and fulfilling

their ethical obligations as teachers, researchers, organizational consultants, and

practitioners. Standard 3.01 of the APA Ethics Code (APA, 2002b) does not prohibit

such discriminations.

􀀵 The graduate psychology faculty of a university used differences in standardized test

scores, undergraduate grades, and professionally related experience as selection criteria Decoding The Ethics Code

for program admission.

􀀵 A research psychologist sampled individuals from specific age, gender, and cultural

groups to test a specific hypothesis relevant to these groups.

􀀵 An organizational psychologist working for a software company designed assessments

for employee screening and promotion to distinguish individuals with the

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Copyright © 2013 by SAGE Publications, Inc.

92——PART II ENFORCEABLE STANDARDS

Standard 3.01 does not require psychologists offering therapeutic assistance to

accept as clients/patients all individuals who request mental health services. Discerning

and prudent psychologists know the limitations of their competence and accept to

treat only those whom they can reasonably expect to help based on their education,

training, and experience (Striefel, 2007). Psychologists may also refuse to accept

clients/patients on the basis of individuals’ lack of commitment to the therapeutic

process, problems they have that fall outside the therapists’ area of competence, or their Decoding The Ethics Code

perceived inability or unwillingness to pay for services (Knapp & VandeCreek, 2003).

Psychologists must, however, exercise reasonable judgment and precautions to

ensure that their work does not reflect personal or organizational biases or prejudices

that can lead to injustice (Principle D: Justice). For example, the American

Psychological Association’s (APA’s) Resolution on Religious, Religion-Based, and/or

Religion-Derived Prejudice (APA, 2007d) condemns prejudice and discrimination

against individuals or groups based on their religious or spiritual beliefs, practices,

adherence, or background.

Standard 3.01 prohibits psychologists from making unfair discriminations based

on the factors listed in the standard.

requisite information technology skills to perform tasks essential to the positions from

individuals not possessing these skills.

􀀵 A school psychologist considers factors such as age, English language proficiency, and

hearing or vision impairment when making educational placement recommendations.

􀀵 A family bereavement counselor working in an elder care unit of a hospital regularly

considered the extent to which factors associated with the families’ culture or religious

values should be considered in the treatment plan.

􀀵 A psychologist conducting couples therapy with gay partners worked with clients to

explore the potential effects of homophobia, relational ambiguity, and family support

on their relationship (Green & Mitchell, 2002)Decoding The Ethics Code.

􀀴 The director of a graduate program in psychology rejected a candidate for program

admission because the candidate indicated that he was a Muslim.

􀀴 A consulting psychologist agreed to a company’s request to develop pre-employment

procedures that would screen out applicants from Spanish-speaking cultures based on

the company’s presumption that the majority of such candidates would be undocumented

residents.

􀀴 A psychologist working in a Medicaid clinic decided not to include a cognitive component

in a behavioral treatment based solely on the psychologist’s belief that lowerincome

patients were incapable of responding to “talk therapies.”

􀀴 One partner of a gay couple who recently entered couple counseling called their psychologist

when he learned that he tested positive for the HIV virus. Although when

working with heterosexual couples the psychologist strongly encouraged clients to

inform their partners if they had a sexually transmitted disease, she did not believe such

an approach was necessary in this situation based on her erroneous assumption that

all gay men engaged in reckless and risky sexual behavior (see Palma & Iannelli, 2002).

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Copyright © 2013 by SAGE Publications, Inc. Decoding The Ethics Code

Chapter 6 Standards on Human Relations——93

Discrimination Proscribed by Law

Standard 3.01 prohibits psychologists from discriminating among individuals on

any basis proscribed by law. For example, industrial–organizational psychologists

need to be aware of nondiscrimination laws relevant to race, religion, and disability

that apply to companies for which they work (e.g., ADA, www.ada.gov; Title VII of

the Civil Rights Act of 1964, www.eeoc.gov/laws/statutes/titlevii.cfm, archive.eeoc

.gov/types/religion.html; Workforce Investment Act of 1998, www.doleta.gov/

usworkforce/wia/wialaw.txt). Psychologists conducting personnel performance

evaluations should avoid selecting tests developed to assess psychopathology (see

Karraker v. Rent-a-Center, 2005). In addition, under ADA (1990), disability-relevant

questions can only be asked of prospective employees after the employer has made

a conditional offer. In some instances, ADA laws for small businesses also apply to

psychologists in private practice, such as wheelchair accessibility. In addition,

HIPAA prohibits covered entities from discriminating against an individual for filing

a complaint, participating in a compliance review or hearing, or opposing an act or

practice that is unlawful under the regulation (45 CFR 164.530[g]).

3.02 Sexual Harassment

Psychologists do not engage in sexual harassment. Sexual harassment is sexual solicitation,

physical advances, or verbal or nonverbal conduct that is sexual in nature, that occurs in connection

with the psychologist’s activities or role as a psychologist, and that either (1) is unwelcome,

is offensive, or creates a hostile workplace or educational environment, and the psychologist

knows or is told this; or (2) is sufficiently severe or intense to be abusive to a reasonable person

in the context. Sexual harassment can consist of a single intense or severe act or of multiple

persistent or pervasive acts. (See also Standard 1.08, Unfair Discrimination Against Complainants Decoding The Ethics Code

and Respondents.)

It is always wise for psychologists to be familiar with and comply with applicable

laws and institutional policies regarding sexual harassment. Laws on sexual

harassment vary across jurisdictions, are often complex, and change over time.

Standard 3.02 provides a clear definition of behaviors that are prohibited and considered

sexual harassment under the Ethics Code. When this definition establishes

a higher standard of conduct than required by law, psychologists must comply

with Standard 3.02.

According to Standard 3.02, sexual harassment can be verbal or nonverbal

solicitation, advances, or sexual conduct that occurs in connection with the psychologist’s

activities or role as a psychologist. The wording of the definition was

carefully crafted to prohibit sexual harassment without encouraging complaints

against psychologists whose poor judgments or behaviors do not rise to the level of

harassment. Thus, to meet the standard’s threshold for sexual harassment, behaviors

have to be either so severe or intense that a reasonable person would deem

them abusive in that context, or, regardless of intensity, the psychologist was aware

or had been told that the behaviors are unwelcome, offensive, or creating a hostile

workplace or educational environment. Decoding The Ethics Code

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Copyright © 2013 by SAGE Publications, Inc.

94——PART II ENFORCEABLE STANDARDS

For example, a senior faculty member who places an arm around a student’s

shoulder during a discussion or who tells an off-color sexual joke that offends a

number of junior faculty may not be in violation of this standard if such behavior

is uncharacteristic of the faculty member’s usual conduct, if a reasonable

person might interpret the behavior as inoffensive, and if there is reason to

assume the psychologist neither is aware of nor has been told the behavior is

offensive.

A hostile workplace or educational environment is one in which the sexual

language or behaviors of the psychologist impairs the ability of those who are the

target of the sexual harassment to conduct their work or participate in classroom

and educational experiences. The actions of the senior faculty member described

above might be considered sexual harassment if the psychologist’s behaviors

reflected a consistent pattern of sexual conduct during class or office hours, if

such behaviors had led students to withdraw from the psychologist’s class, or if

students or other faculty had repeatedly told the psychologist about the discomfort

produced. Decoding The Ethics Code

􀀴 A senior psychologist at a test company sexually fondled a junior colleague during an

office party.

􀀴 During clinical supervision, a trainee had an emotional discussion with her female

supervisor about how her own experiences recognizing her lesbian sexual orientation

during adolescence were helping her counsel the gay and lesbian youths

she was working with. At the end of the session, the supervisor kissed the trainee

on the lips.

According to this standard, sexual harassment can also consist of a single intense

or severe act that would be considered abusive to a reasonable person.

A violation of this standard applies to all psychologists irrespective of the status,

sex, or sexual orientation of the psychologist or individual harassed.

3.03 Other Harassment

Psychologists do not knowingly engage in behavior that is harassing or demeaning to persons

with whom they interact in their work based on factors such as those persons’ age, gender, gender

identity, race, ethnicity, culture, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, disability, language,

or socioeconomic status.

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NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION, SALE, OR REPRINTING.

ANY AND ALL UNAUTHORIZED USE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED.

Copyright © 2013 by SAGE Publications, Inc.

Chapter 6 Standards on Human Relations——95

According to Principle E: Respect for People’s Rights and Dignity, psychologists

should eliminate from their work the effect of bias and prejudice based on factors

such as age, gender, gender identity, race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, sexual

orientation, disability, language, and socioeconomic status. Standard 3.03 prohibits

behaviors that draw on these categories to harass or demean individuals with

whom psychologists work, such as colleagues, students, research participants, or

employees. Behaviors in violation of this standard include ethnic slurs and negative

generalizations based on gender, sexual orientation, disability, or socioeconomic

status whose intention or outcome is lowering status or reputation. Decoding The Ethics Code

The term knowingly reflects the fact that evolving societal sensitivity to language

and behaviors demeaning to different groups may result in psychologists unknowingly

acting in a pejorative manner. The term knowingly also reflects awareness that

interpretations of behaviors that are harassing or demeaning can often be subjective.

Thus, a violation of this standard rests on an objective evaluation that a psychologist

would have or should have been aware that his or her behavior would be

perceived as harassing or demeaning.

This standard does not prohibit psychologists from critical comments about

the work of students, colleagues, or others based on legitimate criteria. For

example, professors can inform, and often have a duty to inform, students that

their writing or clinical skills are below program standards or indicate when a

student’s classroom comment is incorrect or inappropriate. It is the responsibility

of employers or chairs of academic departments to critically review, report on,

and discuss both positive and negative evaluations of employees or faculty.

Similarly, the standard does not prohibit psychologists conducting assessment or

therapy from applying valid diagnostic classifications that a client/patient may

find offensive. Decoding The Ethics Code

3.04 Avoiding Harm

Psychologists take reasonable steps to avoid harming their clients/patients, students, supervisees,

research participants, organizational clients, and others with whom they work, and to minimize

harm where it is foreseeable and unavoidable.

As articulated in Principle A: Beneficence and Nonmaleficence, psychologists

seek to safeguard the welfare of those with whom they work and avoid or minimize

harm when conflicts occur among professional obligations. In the rightly practiced

profession and science of psychology, harm is not always unethical or avoidable.

Legitimate activities that may lead to harm include (a) giving low grades to students

who perform poorly on exams; (b) providing a valid diagnosis that prevents a

client/patient from receiving disability insurance; (c) conducting personnel reviews

that lead to an individual’s termination of employment; (d) conducting a custody

evaluation in a case in which the judge determines one of the parents must relinquish

custodial rights; or (e) disclosing confidential information to protect the

physical welfare of a third party.

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Copyright © 2013 by SAGE Publications, Inc. Decoding The Ethics Code

96——PART II ENFORCEABLE STANDARDS

Steps for Avoiding Harm

Recognizing that such harms are not always avoidable or inappropriate,

Standard 3.04 requires psychologists to take reasonable steps to avoid harming

those with whom they interact in their professional and scientific roles and to

minimize harm where it is foreseeable and unavoidable.

These steps often include complying with other standards in the Ethics Code,

such as the following:

􀀵 Parents of a fourth-grade student wanted their child placed in a special education

class. After administering a complete battery of tests, the school psychologist’s

report indicated that the child’s responses did not meet established definitions for

learning disabilities and therefore did not meet the district’s criteria for such

placement.

􀀵 A forensic psychologist was asked to evaluate the mental status of a criminal

defendant who was asserting volitional insanity as a defense against liability in

his trial for manslaughter. The psychologist conducted a thorough evaluation

based on definitions of volitional insanity and irresistible impulse established by

the profession of psychology and by law. While the psychologist’s report noted

that the inmate had some problems with impulse control and emotional instability,

it also noted that these deficiencies did not meet the legal definition of volitional

that would bar prosecution (see also Hot Topic “Human Rights and

Psychologists’ Involvement in Assessments Related to Death Penalty Cases” in

Chapter 4)Decoding The Ethics Code.

􀀴 A psychologist conducted therapy over the Internet for clients/patients in a rural area

120 miles from her office. The psychologist had not developed a plan with each client/

patient for handling mental health crises. During a live video Internet session, a client

who had been struggling with bouts of depression showed the psychologist his gun

and said he was going outside to “blow his head off.” The psychologist did not have

the contact information of any local hospital, relative, or friend to send prompt emergency

assistance.

􀀴 A psychologist with prescription privileges prescribed a Food and Drug Administration

(FDA)-approved neuroenhancer to help a young adult patient suffering from performance

anxiety associated with his responsibilities as quarterback for his college varsity

football team. The psychologist failed to discuss the importance of gradual reduction in

dosage, and she was dismayed to learn that her patient had been hospitalized after he

abruptly discontinued the medication when the football season ended (APA, 2011a;

McCrickerd, 2010; I. Singh & Kelleher, 2010).

􀀴 Consistent with Standard 10.10a, Terminating Treatment, a psychologist treating a

client/patient with a diagnosis of borderline disorder terminated therapy when she

realized the client/patient had formed an iatrogenic attachment to her that was clearly

interfering with any benefits that could be derived from the treatment. However, her

failure to provide appropriate pretermination counseling and referrals contributed to

the client’s/patient’s emergency hospitalization for suicidal risk (Standard 10.10c,

Terminating Treatment)Decoding The Ethics Code.

Personality Chapter For General Psychology

Personality Chapter For General Psychology

Personality Chapter

Someone insults you and you spend the next two hours imagining the things you could have (or should have) said to humiliate them. According to Freud, you are engaging in free association.

Select one:

True

False

The BEST kind of personality test is one that is _______.

Select one:

a. reliable, but not necessarily valid

b. valid, but not necessarily reliable

c. neither reliable nor valid

d. both valid and reliable

Jenny is 15 years old. She is capable of mature sexuality, is able to postpone gratification, and handle responsibility. According to Freud, she is in the phallic stage.

Select one: Personality Chapter For General Psychology

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True

False

Johnny is 8 years old. He likes to play with other little boys, but has no interest in playing with little girls. According to Freud, he is in the latency stage.

Select one:

True

False

According to Hippocrates, if my temper is out of control, I need to check the balance of my green bile.

Select one:

True

False

 

According to Hippocrates, too much phlegm may make me sluggish and apathetic.

Select one:

True

False

Adler called the individual’s attempts to overcome physical weaknesses ________.

Select one: Personality Chapter For General Psychology

a. Reciprocity

b. Fictional finalism

c. Compensation

d. Reaction formation

 

The Rorschach personality test relies on a subject telling stories based on cards depicting human figures in various poses?

Select one:

True

False

Freud believed that personality is formed around ________ structures.

Select one:

a. five

b. two

c. three

d. four

 

“Relative” is one of the three basic characteristics of personality as presented in your lecture notes.

Select one:

True

False

 

Without using the ego, one way the id can obtain gratification is through the reality principle.

Select one:

True

False

For Freud, the seething cauldron of unconscious urges and desires continuously seeking expression is the ego.

Select one: Personality Chapter For General Psychology

True

False

For both Bandura and Rotter, a person’s expectancies become a critical part of his or her ________.

Select one:

a. explanatory style

b. self-actualizing tendency

c. ideal self

d. persona

 

For Horney, self-actualization is a stronger motivating force than is sex

Select one:

True

False

 

According to your text, personality is stable.

Select one:

True

False

 

Adler felt that some people become so fixated on their feelings of inadequacy that they develop ________.

Select one:

a. neurotic trends

b. an archetype

c. a fixation

d. an inferiority complex

 

According to Freud, a girl’s sexual attachment to her father and jealousy of her mother is called ________.

Select one:

a. the Electra complex

b. the Oedipus complex

c. countertransference

d. transference

 

For Freud, the term “sexual instinct” refers to ________.

Select one:

a. erotic sexuality

b. the personal unconscious

c. any form of pleasure

d. childhood experiences

 

According to Jung, people who base their actions on their perceptions, senses, and intuition are ________.

Select one: Personality Chapter For General Psychology

a. introverts

b. irrational individuals

c. extraverts

d. rational individuals

 

Terry Francis, a world famous psychologist, argues that behavior is the end product of a variety of some conscious and mostly unconscious forces interacting within a person’s mind. Terry Francis is most likely a behavioral psychologist

Select one:

True

False

 

Collective memories of experiences people have had in common since prehistoric times, such as mothers, heroes, or villains are called ________ by Carl Jung

Select one:

a. archetypes

b. personas

c. parasymbols

d. animas

 

The best known and most influential psychodynamic theorist is ________.

Select one:

a. Watson

b. Maslow

c. Skinner

d. Freud

 

According to Jung, our repressed thoughts, undeveloped ideas, and forgotten experiences are contained in the collective unconscious.

Select one:

True

False

 

According to Jung, people who regulate actions by thinking and feeling are ________.

Select one:

a. irrational individuals

b. introverts

c. extraverts

d. rational individuals

 

According to Jung, a person who usually focuses on his or her own thoughts and feelings is a(n) introvert.

Select one:

True

False

 

According to Hippocrates, black bile could be responsible for a person’s depression.

Select one:

True

False

 

When an individual’s self-concept is closely matched with his or her inborn capacities, then that person is likely to become what Rogers calls a(n) ________ person.

Select one:

a. fully functioning

b. fully rational

c. actualizing

d. harmoniously integrated

 

Horney believed that sexual factors are the most important factors shaping personality.

Select one:

True

False

 

According to William Seldon, the lactomorphic body type signals an artistic, introverted temperament.

Select one:

True

False

 

Erikson’s stage of initiative versus guilt corresponds approximately with Freud’s ________ stage.

Select one:

a. oral

b. genital

c. genital

d. phallic

Erik is a newborn. According to Erikson, his main task will be to develop a sense of autonomy.

Select one:

True

False

 

Jack is 24 years old. His major task, according to Erikson, is to develop a sense of identity.

Select one:

True

False

 

According to William Seldon, the endomorphic body type is likely to display a relaxed and sociable demeanor

Select one:

True

False

 

In Rogers’s theory, the full acceptance and love of another person regardless of that person’s behavior is called ________.

Select one: Personality Chapter For General Psychology

a. Psychological congruence

b. Self-actualization

c. Unconditional positive regard

d. Psychosynthesis

 

According to Rogers, the primary goal of life is to ________.

Select one:

a. understand one’s personal ancestral history

b. harmoniously unify the id, ego, and superego

c. successfully overcome the developmental challenges

d. fulfill one’s inborn capacities and potentialities

 

Gerald takes great pride in his sexual prowess and treats women with contempt. Yet, he feels worthless and has low self-esteem. In Freud’s view, he is probably fixated in the oral stage.

Select one:

True

False

 

The accuracy and usefulness of projective tests depends largely on ________.

Select one:

a. the age of the client

b. the type of disorder being diagnosed

c. whether the client likes taking tests

d. the skill of the examiner

 

According to William Sheldon, the mesomorphic body type indicates a courageous and assertive personality.

Select one:

True

False

 

According to Freud, a boy’s sexual attachment to his mother and jealousy of his father is called ________.

Select one:

a. countertransference

b. transference

c. the Electra complex

d. the Oedipus complex

 

Each of the following is one of the “Big Five” dimensions of personality EXCEPT ________.

Select one:

a. Emotional stability

b. Neuroticism

c. Agreeableness

d. Extraversion

 

According to Freud, the ego operates ________.

Select one:

a. only preconsciously

b. only unconsciously

c. partly consciously, partly preconsciously, and partly unconsciously

d. only unconsciously

 

Jerry has a very immature attitude about sex and sucks his thumb even though he is 32 years old. Freud would say these behaviors result from libido.

Select one:

True

False

 

Each of the following is an advantage of projective tests EXCEPT ________.

Select one:

a. because the tests are flexible, people can take them in a relaxed atmosphere

b. They have higher reliability and validity than objective tests.

c. some psychologists believe that projective tests can uncover unconscious thoughts and fantasies

d. since the person taking the test often doesn’t know its true purpose, responses are less likely to be faked Personality Chapter For General Psychology

 

Barney is a person who believes he can control his own fate. He feels that by hard work, skill, and training it is possible to avoid punishments and find rewards. Rotter would say that Barney has a(n) external locus of control.

Select one:

True

False

 

In assessing personality, we are MOST interested in a person’s ________ behavior

Select one:

a. best

b. worst

c. typical

d. atypical

 

Ralph is a private person. He keeps other people at a distance by putting on a public “face” that is nearly the opposite of his inner, true self. Jung called this public “face” worn by Ralph the persona.

Select one:

True

False

 

A study of the “Big Five” dimensions of personality found that ________ were reliable predictors of job performance in sales.

Select one:

a. none of them

b. conscientiousness and extraversion

c. all five of them

d. agreeableness and neuroticism

 

Erikson stresses the quality of ________ in personality development

Select one:

a. stimulus motives

b. sexual motives

c. parent-child relationships

d. primary-process thinking

 

The unconscious is best defined as ideas, thoughts, and feelings of which we are not and cannot normally become aware .

Select one:

True

False

 

According to Bandura, standards people develop in order to rate the adequacy of their own behavior in variety of situations are called ________.

Select one:

a. reciprocal variables

b. conditions of worth

c. performance standards

d. self-efficacy standards

 

The proper chronological order of Freud’s psychosexual stages is ________.

Select one:

a. oral, anal, phallic, latency, genital

b. anal, oral, phallic, latency, genital

c. oral, anal, genital, phallic, latency

d. anal, oral, genital, latency, phallic

 

________ theory emphasizes that humans are positively motivated and progress toward higher levels of functioning.

Select one:

a. Social Learning

b. Humanistic

c. Psychoanalytic

d. Trait

 

The unique pattern of characteristic thoughts, feelings, and behaviors that persists over time and situations is called ________.

Select one:

a. personality

b. a habit

c. learning

d. a trait

 

Horney disagreed with many of Freud’s ideas, but particularly those regarding ________.

Select one:

a. his emphasis on unconscious processes affecting conscious functioning

b. the importance of early childhood in shaping adult personality

c. the importance of defense mechanisms in protecting the ego from anxiety.

d. his analysis of women and his emphasis on sexual instincts

 

Audrey is a normal, healthy two-year-old. Her main task, according to Erikson, will be to develop a sense of autonomy.

Select one: Personality Chapter For General Psychology

True

False

 

Erikson suggested that success in each of the life stages he outlined depends upon adjustment during the previous stage .

Select one:

True

False

 

According to Bandura, the expectancy that one’s efforts will be successful is called self-esteem.

Select one:

True

False

 

In Rogers’s theory, the full acceptance and love of another person regardless of that person’s behavior is called archetypes.

True

False

 

According to Hippocrates, a surplus of blood may cause confusion and anxiety.

True

False

Psychology Homework Assignment

Psychology Homework Assignment

Who can complete my exam asap!!!! A functionalist would likely ask which one of the following questions about socially assistive robots? a. How will socially assistive robots affect interaction? b. What meanings do people assign to socially assistive robots? c. Who benefits from socially assistive robots and at whose expense? d. What are the intended and unintended consequences of socially assistive robots? 1 points Question 5 Which of the following is a false statement about the characteristics of high-quality sociological research? a. Sociological findings endure as long as the research process can be replicated. b. Once a sociological study is completed, findings are considered final. c. Sociologists strive to be objective. d. Sociologists invite others to critique their work. Psychology Homework Assignment 1 points Question 6 Which one of the following phrases would Marx be least likely to use to describe capitalism? a. blood-sucking b. a boundless thirst c. a werewolf-like hunger d. socially conscious 1 points

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Question 7 The early sociologists were witnesses to the transforming effects of the a. the Industrial Revolution. b. World War II. c. World War I. d. War in Afghanistan. 1 points Question 8 Each of the _____ offers a central question to direct thinking and key concepts to organize answers. a. negotiated order b. social actions c. theoretical perspectives d. methods of research 1 points Question 9 _____ is the theorist most likely to draw attention to unconditional basic income as a response to widespread unemployment. a. Karl Marx b. Max Weber c. Auguste Comte d. Emile Durkheim 1 points Question 10 _____ is the sociologist who focused on the factors that strengthen, weaken, or otherwise shape the character of social ties. a. Karl Marx b. Emile Durkheim c. W.E.B Dubois d. Max Weber 1 points Question 11 Smart phones, introduced in 1996, are now a global-scale phenomenon. Some people in remote locations have embraced smart phone apps that connect them with health care providers anywhere in the world. This development illustrates the twin forces of a. industrialization and mechanization. b. globalization and glocalization. c. troubles and issues. d. human activity and media. 1 points Question 12 The _____ is the best perspective to draw upon for exploring human-robot interactions. a. social action theory b. functionalist c. symbolic interaction d. conflict 1 points Question 13 The defining feature of the Industrial Revolution was a. solidarity. b. mechanization. c. standardization. d. modernization. 1 points Question 14 The question “Who benefits from a particular pattern or social arrangement?” is of most interest to a(n) a. conflict theorist. b. symbolic interactionist. c. action theorist. d. functionalist. Psychology Homework Assignment 1 points Question 15 “Knowing one another better reinforces the common connection such that the potential for caring and empathetic moral actions increase.” This statement summarizes the essence of a. sympathetic knowledge. b. double consciousness. c. solidarity. d. division of labor. 1 points Question 16 An employer tells workers “If you aren’t happy with the pay and working conditions here, go work somewhere else! It’s a free country.” Conflict theorists call this line of reasoning a. cultural relativity. b. sympathetic knowledge. c. good business practice. d. the façade of legitimacy. 1 points Question 17 The Communist Manifesto is a famous pamphlet that _____ co-authored with Fredrich Engels. a. Emile Durkheim. b. Karl Marx. c. Max Weber. d. W.E.B. DuBois. 1 points Question 18 When in a nation of 150 million workers, 24 million are unemployed, that is a. a crime. b. a trouble. c. an issue. d. personal tragedy. 1 points Question 19 Which of the following would be the best option to obtain a representative sample of students at your college? a. At random, draw a list of students from the most recent college registrar’s list. b. Stop students as they are walking to their cars in parking lots and ask them to participate. c. Ask all of the sociology majors to participate in the study. d. Ask students eating in the cafeteria at lunchtime to participate in an important study. 1 points Question 20 The term ___________________ describes a state in which ties attaching individuals to others in the society are weak. a. egoistic b. fatalistic c. altruistic d. anomic 1 points Question 21 Jared lives in a consumption-oriented culture. He decides to do historical research to understand how a country might develop a conservation-oriented way of life. Jared’s approach is influenced by a. Max Weber. b. Emile Durkheim. c. Karl Marx. d. Auguste Comte. 1 points Question 22 When Oreo cookies are transplanted into a new setting and then changed to fit local tastes, the process is known as a. globalization. b. industrialization. c. glocalization. d. the sociological imagination. 1 points Question 23 The high school dropout rate in the United States is greater than 25 percent. C. Wright Mills would classify this situation as a. an issue. b. a trouble. c. value-rational action. d. a social fact. 1 points Question 24 Lee’s research involving Snackbot showed that under the right conditions, people can form collegial (even social) relationships with workplace robots. This finding relates to the _____ perspective. a. functionalist b. symbolic interactionist c. social action d. conflict 1 points Question 25 Marx believed that ________ was the first economic system that could maximize the immense productive potential of human labor and ingenuity. a. democracy b. capitalism c. socialism d. communism 1 points Question 26 According to functionalists, poverty exists because a. somebody has to be on the bottom. b. it contributes in some way to the stability of an existing social order. c. the poor lack the drive to do better. d. the poor are largely unmotivated to work. Psychology Homework Assignment 1 points Question 27 One unintended or unexpected disruption of socially assistive robots is that people may actually prefer the company of robots over fellow humans. This situation represents a. manifest dysfunction. b. manifest function. c. latent dysfunction. d. latent function. 1 points Question 28 As driveless technologies are developed we anticipate that 1.6 million long-distance truck drivers will be at risk of losing their jobs. This situation is an example of a. an issue. b. an opportunity. c. a trouble. d. a personal crisis. 1 points Question 29 Behavior influenced by the attention one receives from being the subject of a research study is the a. latent effect. b. experimental effect. c. Hawthorne effect. d. special subject effect. 1 points Question 30 Which one of the following aspects of the globalization process would Weber be most concerned? a. The ways in which globalization reduces wages. b. The ways in which globalization undermines behavior motivated by tradition. c. The way in which globalization creates hardships for low-income households. d. The way in which globalization undermines local ties. 1 points Question 31 Which of the following is something symbolic interactionists emphasize? a. outcomes b. negotiated order c. functions d. means of production 1 points Question 32 If an individual pursues a college degree because everyone in his or her family going back five generations is college-educated, the action can be classified as a. value-rational. b. instrumental rational c. traditional. d. affectional. 1 points Question 33 Which one of the following sociologists would most likely advocate for putting low-cost technologies such as smart phones into the hands of those who are disadvantaged? a. Max Weber b. Jane Addams c. Emile Durkheim d. Auguste Comte 1 points Question 34 A trial explanation predicting a relationship between independent and dependent variables is a(n) a. theory. b. fact. c. observation. d. hypothesis. 1 points Question 35 If one respondent gives different answers to the same question at two different points in time, the researcher should be concerned about a. reliability. b. the Hawthorne effect. c. representativeness. d. validity. 1 points Question 36 Which one of the following assumptions applies to the scientific method? a. Research findings can be manipulated to advance a good cause. b. Knowledge is acquired through observation. c. Truth is confirmed through faith. d. Research finding should not be replicated. Psychology Homework Assignment 1 points Question 37 W.E.B. Dubois traced the origin of _________ to the scramble for Africa’s resources, beginning with the slave trade. a. disenchantment b. the color line c. troubles d. double consciousness 1 points Question 38 Which one of the following statements represents a criticism of the functionalist perspective? a. It leaves us wondering about a part’s overall effect. b. It focuses on the “small stuff.” c. It is too liberal. d. It focuses on the “have nots.” 1 points Question 39 Jamie gains first-hand knowledge about poverty by working at a food bank. This kind of knowledge is known as, a. social research. b. sympathetic knowledge. c. solidarity. d. double consciousness. 1 points Question 40 Researchers should maintain objectivity. This means they should a. not accept funding from outside sources. b. not let personal and subjective views about the topic influence observations or outcome of research. c. refuse to share data with others. d. stay away from topics in which they have a personal interest. 1 points Question 41 The actions of someone who always gives their best effort and never cuts corners would qualify as ____ action. a. affective b. instrumental rational c. traditional d. value rational 1 points Question 42 If socially assistive robots assume caregiving roles, a number of unanticipated consequences may occur such as the elimination of sexual abuse. This unanticipated consequence is a a. manifest function. b. latent function. c. manifest dysfunction. d. latent dysfunction. 1 points Question 43 Which one of the following statements describes the best way to apply the three perspectives? a. Most sociologists analyze an issue using one perspective. b. We can acquire a more complete view of something by applying all three perspectives. c. Only one perspective can give us a complete picture of a process or an event. d. The three perspectives should be viewed as opposing viewpoints. 1 points Question 44 Jane Addams maintained that Hull House a. was the equivalent of an applied university. b. was a failed experiment in social engineering. Psychology Homework Assignment c. could not deliver services that helped working poor. d. was analogous to a community college. 1 points Question 45 Auguste Comte recommended that sociologists study a. the color line. b. the things people have created. c. conflict as in agent of change. d. the ties that bind. 1 points Question 46 The obesity rate in the United States is greater than 30 percent. According to Mills, the key to resolving this issue involves focusing on a. the character flaws of the 92 million plus Americans who are obese. b. getting people to eat less. c. addressing the underlying social forces that contribute to obesity. d. ways to get the obese to want to lose weight. 1 points Question 47 Which one of the following concepts applies to the façade of legitimacy? a. fair analysis b. misleading c. logical d. well-documented assertions 1 points Question 48 The question “Is this operational definition really measuring what it claims to measure?” addresses concerns surrounding a. correlations. b. sampling. c. validity. d. reliability. 1 points Question 49 The economic system accompanying and driving the Industrial Revolution was a. the welfare state. b. socialism. c. communism. d. capitalism. 1 points Question 50 The gay pride movement can be traced to 1897 in Berlin Germany and has spread to various locations around the world. 115 years later the first gay bar was established in Lamai Beach, Thailand. This movement illustrates the twin forces of a. industrialization and mechanization. b. troubles and issues. c. globalization and glocalization. d. human activity and media Psychology Homework Assignment.