Title: Chapter 5 Socialization
1Chapter 5 Socialization
2Socialization
- Socialization (defined) the social interaction
process through which individuals acquire
personality and learn the way of life of their
society. - Socialization is the link between the individual
and society neither can survive without it. - Primary socialization the initial socialization,
lasting roughly 6 years, in which the infant
acquires a personality. This is the most
important phase. - Secondary socialization all additional
socialization after primary socialization,
lasting the rest of ones life.
3Personality
- Personality (defined) an individuals typical
patterns of thought, feeling and action. - Initially emerges via primary socialization.
- 3 components of personality
- 1. Cognitive thoughts, beliefs, memories, etc.
- 2. Emotional or Affective feelings like love,
pride, guilt, anger,etc. - 3. Behavioral patterns of physical behavior,
skills, etc. - The norms and value of a culture influence the
socialization process as well as the personality
traits we exhibit.
4Nature versus Nurture
- Is social behavior the product of heredity or
learning? - We are the products of the interaction between
heredity and learning. - Genetic factors provide the basic potentials of
an individual. Social experience may develop or
discourage these potentials. - Similar to seeds and soil. Both need each other,
and the same seed grows differently in different
soils.
5Effects of Childhood Socialization
- Children raised in childhood isolation.
- The case of Anna (1932-1938) 5 years in near
total isolation. Raised in a storage room in a
Pennsylvania farm house by an unstable mother
from a strict family where illegitimate children
were taboo. - When rescued by a social worker, she was a zombie
unresponsive to the social world.
Re-socialization helped her a little she
learned to smile - but she was permanently
retarded in virtually every way cognitive,
affective and behavioral.
6Conclusion
- Children raised in near total isolation suffer
retardation along all three dimensions of
personality. - Long term isolation the duration of the primary
socialization period - seems to produce permanent
or irreversible retardation. - Short term isolation perhaps a few years during
primary socialization produces initial
retardation, but these effects may be reversible
with effective re-socialization.
7Children Raised in Total Institutions
- Total Institution residence where inmates are
cut off from society, under the control of a
hierarchy of official. - Examples prison, boarding school, asylum, boot
camp, bureaucratic orphanage. - Many orphanages in the 1950s were total
institutions. Personality studies revealed that
some of these children did not have a chance to
establish close emotional ties with specific
others. - The result was slight physical, social, and
emotional retardation for some, particularly in
emotional empathy skills. They were a bit more
emotionally aloof or cold than other children.
8Monkeys raised in total isolation
- Harry Harlows rhesus monkey experiments revealed
that even in monkeys, social behavior is largely
learned, not inherited. - Isolated monkeys didnt know how to mate.
- Female mothers who are artificially impregnated
treat their offspring in an unloving and abusive
manner, or simply ignore them. - This suggests there may not be a maternal
instinct. - Infant monkeys, if given a choice, prefer a
cuddly cloth doll with no feeder bottle to a
wire doll that has a feeder bottle attached,
suggesting an instinct for emotional/physical
contact.
9The Harlow Research - Conclusions
- 1. Isolated monkeys become asocial.
- 2. Infant monkeys seem to derive emotional
benefits with physical contact/hugs. - 3. Social contact not necessarily with the
mother is the key. - 4. Short periods of isolation (3 months or less)
produce damages which can be reversed, but long
term isolation produces irreversible damage to
the monkeys.
10Implications for Humans
- Humans, lacking the complex instincts that guide
behavior in most other species, can become fully
human only by learning in social interaction with
other people. - Intimate contact appears to be a critical need,
especially during primary socialization.
11The Emergence of the Self
- The self (defined) an individuals conscious
experience of a distinct personal identity
separate from all other people and things. - Humans are capable of thinking about themselves
as objects to be reflected upon. - In other words, humans are self-aware.
- At birth we have no self, or self-awareness. It
is learned and it emerges during primary
socialization. - The self is a social product. It is created and
modified via social interaction. - Research such as the Who am I test suggests
that the social statuses we acquire influence how
we perceive and feel about ourselves.
12Theories About the Self
13Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)
- The conventional view of self and personality was
that they were the products of heredity. - Freud was influenced by Victorian patriarchy and
the dominance of biology at that time. - Freud believed that, while biological forces were
paramount, cultural forces did play a (small)
role. - This represents a slight shift in the thinking of
that era. This new thinking concedes a role for
culture. - Recall Durkheims revelations about the origins
of suicide this, at about the same time.
14Freud Elements of Personality
- Freud argued there are 3 components of
personality - 1. The id. Rooted in biology, it represents the
persons basic needs or drives. It exists at
birth. - It reflects the needs of the individual.
- 2. The ego. The persons conscious attempt to
balance the id-drives with the demands of
society. The ego develops out of the awareness
that society exists apart from the id. A healthy
ego successfully manages the opposing forces of
the id versus the superego. - 3. The superego. Developed during socialization.
The superego reflects the presence of societys
mores, internalized into the self as our
conscience. - It reflects the needs of society.
15Charles Cooley The Looking-Glass Self
- Basic insight we develop a self-image based on
how we think others perceive us. - Three steps in the formation of self-concept
- 1. We observe how others react to us.
- We want to know whether we are loved, attractive,
etc. - 2. We interpret others reactions.
- We note whether others reactions are consistent
with what we imagine ourselves to be. - 3. We develop a self-concept based on that
interpretation. - Based on how we perceive others reactions, we
form a self-opinion. We may like ourselves, or we
may hate ourselves.
16George Herbert Mead (1863-1931)
- Mead distinguished between the I and the me
components of the self. - The me component refers to the self as object -
or the self as seen by society (or at least how
the individual thinks they are seen). This is
similar to Cooleys Looking-Glass self. - The I component refers to the self as subject.
The I is the response of the organism to how it
is viewed by society. We are constantly reacting
against society and the I is the dynamic
component of the self that does this reacting. - To Mead, the self is dynamic. It is constantly
interpreting and acting in context of society.
17George Herbert Mead, continued
- Mead developed the theoretical paradigm of
symbolic interactionism. - Social interaction occurs between individuals via
symbols (gestures, signs, language, etc). - Language is a crucial symbolic system. To Mead,
without language there cannot be a mind. The mind
is essentially a symbol processor. - All symbols including language - are socially
constructed. - Therefore, to Mead, the mind itself is a social
product.
18Meads Theory of Role-Taking
- Mead argued that socialization occurs through the
process of role-taking. In this process the child
learns to take the roles of others so that they
can view the world from their perspective. - Role-taking occurs over 4 stages
- 1. Imitation. The infant simply mimics the
particular others around it. This lasts about 2
years. - 2. Play. Age 2-6. The child pretends to take the
roles of specific others by playing doctor, or
playing mommy. - 3. Games. By roughly 6 years old, the child is
capable of taking the roles of many others in one
situation, such as grasping how a baseball
infield will react to a fly ball. Here there are
multiple roles, but there is only one social
situation. - 4. Generalized Other. Soon after, the young boy
or girl becomes capable of grasping the nature of
how roles operate across different social
situations. They can generalize about what
society expects of people across different social
situations.
19Learning to Think Jean Piaget
- Piaget (1896-1980) was interested in mental
development and is one of the influences behind
the discipline of cognitive psychology. - He emphasized that social life is needed for the
individual to become conscious of their own mind. - Cognitive development occurs across a series of
stages.
20Four Stages of Cognitive Development
- 1. Sensorimotor stage. (0-2 years). The infant
experiences the world only via sensory contact. - Reliance upon physical/sensory contact with the
environment. - World is seen as a shifting chaos in which
objects have no permanence. Out of sight is out
of mind. - Rooted in the here and now.
- Infant is egocentric, incapable of much empathy.
21Four Stages of Cognitive Development
- 2. Pre-operational stage. (Roughly 2 7 years
old). - Child acquires language.
- Child acquires object permanence.
- Awareness of the results of ones actions.
- Inability to do simple mental operations.
Example the larger object must be heavier to
the child. - Still egocentric. Still has difficulty taking the
views of others.
22Four Stages of Cognitive Development
- 3. Concrete operational stage. (Roughly 7-12
years). - Child can reason about concrete situations, but
has trouble with abstract ideas. - First use of logic to understand events, such as
grasping cause-effect relationships. - Able to simultaneously juggle multiple roles.
- No longer egocentric. Child is able to take
others views into account. They are now
empathetic and show real concern for the plight
of others.
23Four Stages of Cognitive Development
- 4. Formal operational stage. (Roughly 12 years
old). - The individual is able to think abstractly and
critically and can learn highly abstract theories
and concepts. - The individual is no longer tied to the concrete
environment. - While the stage process is universal, not
everyone reaches the formal operational stage. - This stage is more common in developed societies
and appears to be affected by exposure to
high-level education. - Industrial societies encourage formal operational
thinking for many members, but agrarian societies
only encourage it among elites.
24Learning to Feel
- Socialization includes learning how to develop
emotional capacities. - Social scientists know relatively little about
emotions, largely because they are so difficult
to operationalize. - Basic findings
- 1. The process of learning emotions is the same
in all humans. Feelings develop in an orderly
sequence as building blocks beginning with
simple emotions like pleasure and pain and
progressing toward complex emotions like joy and
angst. - 2. The expression of emotions differs across
societies, and even by gender. Social factors
influence what, when, and how emotions are
expressed (as well as how we learn to interpret
emotions). - In our patriarchal society men learn to hide
their expression of grief, but not anger while
women learn to hide their expression of anger,
but not grief.
25Lawrence Kohlberg Moral Development Occurs
Across 3 stages
- 1. Pre-conventional stage. (Young children).
- What is right is that which is pleasurable to me
what is wrong is that which is painful to me.
Note the egocentrism. - 2. Conventional stage. (Many teens and adults).
- What is right is what society says is right. Note
the absence of egocentrism. Many people
(especially conformists) remain in this stage. - 3. Post-conventional stage (Some teens and
adults). - What is right is that which is consistent with
ethical principles, regardless of what society
says. Many never reach this level, but certainly
independent thinkers like Rosa Parks and Martin
Luther King did.
26Carol Gilligan The Gender Factor
- Moral development is influenced by gender
socialization. - Boys tend to be taught a justice perspective.
They are taught to rely upon formal rules.
Therefore something is wrong if it is illegal. - Girls tend to be taught a care and responsibility
perspective. They are taught to judge a situation
by how it relates to personal relationships. An
illegal act may not be wrong if the act was
intentioned to help people.
27Agents of Socialization
281. The Family
- The most significant agent of socialization.
- A primary group, and therefore very powerful.
- Responsible for primary socialization.
- Much family socialization is unconscious and
unintentional. - The family provides an immediate ascribed status
for the infant. - Social class
- Ethnic identity
29The Family, continued
- Research suggests there are social class
differences in family socialization messages that
help perpetuate the social class structure.. - Working class families actions speak louder than
words. - Emphasis is on conformity to rules and staying
out of trouble, with strict punishment for
deviant behavior. - This tends to reinforce working class job
culture, as many working class jobs are
order-taker jobs where conformity to rules is
important. - Middle class families words speak louder than
actions. - Curiosity and taking initiative or risk is
encouraged in the child. Discipline is less
strict. - This tends to reinforce middle class job culture,
as many middle class jobs are order-giver jobs
requiring independent thinking.
302. School
- A form of anticipatory socialization learning
that helps a person achieve a desired position. - Functions to socialize people into certain forms
of knowledge. - Functions to socialize people into core values
and belief systems. Schools may indoctrinate. - Primary school is often the childs first
experience with formal organizations,
specifically, the bureaucracy. - Most schools are secondary groups (formal, task
oriented). - Given the changes in the family toward 2-parent
workers, school functions have changed to offer
more day-care. - School provides a setting for the child to
develop peer group friendships.
313. Peer Groups
- Peer groups are people with similar social
characteristics who hang out with each other.
Members treat each other as relative equals. - They are primary groups with typically high
levels of solidarity. - They are particularly powerful during late
childhood and adolescence. - Identity formation during adolescence is in
context of peer group subcultures, which may
offer different values, beliefs, and tastes than
parents. - Among teens, short term style preferences, sexual
activity, popular culture taste, and other teen
behaviors are shaped mainly by peer groups. - Peer pressure brings norms of conformity within
the in-group.
324. The Mass Media
- The mass media impersonal communications
directed toward a vast audience. - Relatively new and controversial agent of
socialization. - Unlike the family, school, church, and peer
groups, the commercial mass media does not have
the childs interests as their main goal. - Capitalist media prioritize private profit above
most other considerations. Their primary goal is
to make money for their stockholders.
33The mass media, continued
- The commercial mass media serve 2 interests
- 1. The private interest.
- Because they operate for profit, capitalist media
tend to offer lots of sex and violence. While
profitable, excessive sex and violence generally
does not serve the public interest. - 2. The public interest.
- The commercial mass media offer entertainment and
information that serves the public interest.
34The mass media, continued
- The most powerful mass media today is television.
- The average American has the TV turned on for 7
hours each day, and actually watches it for 2 to
3 hours per day. - Children watch TV an average of almost 3 hours
per day. - Commercial TV socializes the child to become a
consumer and to prioritize materialism,
competition, status consciousness, and other
consumer-capitalist values. - Often the values on commercial TV contradict the
parents values. - Heavy TV watchers are more likely to develop a
mean world syndrome a sense that the world is a
mean and dangerous place. - The mean world syndrome has social and
psychological consequences. - While commercial TV does well at entertaining,
many think it does poorly at educating Americans
about important issues necessary for our
democracy.
35The mass media, continued
- The mass media are not objective. They present a
distorted reality to their audience. - Excessive sex and violence.
- Emphasis on stereotypes. Sexism, classism and
other group superiority values are common in the
commercial mass media. - Normalcy, according to the commercial mass media
is the upper middle class lifestyle something
available to only 15-20 of the population. - The commercial mass media emphasize the beauty
myth for women. - This myth says that women should remain young and
physically attractive at all costs. The result is
a decline in self-esteem among American female
teens, who cannot live up to the thin Eurocentric
runway-model ideal promoted by the commercial
media. This false ideal is highly profitable, but
does not serve the public interest.
36Resocialization
- Resocialization refers to deliberate
socialization aimed at radically altering the
self. It is re-creating the self, and it involves
an abrupt break from the former self. - Resocialization is often done within a total
institution. - Total institution residence where inmates are
cut off from society, under the control of a
hierarchy of officials. - Examples prisons boot camp, asylum, boarding
school.
37Brainwashing
- Brainwashing is persuasion or indoctrination,
often by force, to get someone to adopt a
particular set of beliefs and values. It is a
type of resocialization. - Brainwashing is most effective under the
following 4 conditions - 1. The person is isolated from their former
surroundings, people, and self. Total
institutions serve this purpose. - 2. They are subjected to peer pressure to conform
to the new reality. - 3. They are subjected to legitimate authority,
which tells them what to think. - 4. The person is willing to change.
38The Life Course
- Both a biological and a social construction.
- Society imposes its own conception of a life
course upon the physical process of aging. - Society slices up the aging process arbitrarily
into a series of stages. - The number, length and content of these stages
varies across societies.
39The Life Course
- Traditional societies have only a few stages
- Infancy(immaturity)-adulthood-death
- Adulthood is usually defined by acquiring key
roles, like craft-worker or parent. - These roles are acquired at a very young age in
traditional cultures. - Industrial societies have more stages
- Infancy-childhood-adolescence-adulthood-old
age-death
40Childhood
- Childhood was constructed by industrial cultures
- around 1850 in the U.S. - as public schools
emerged for children. - The child was expected to go to school by 1850
to learn literacy skills necessary to industrial
societies and to engage in re-creative
activities. Playgrounds, schools, and child
clothing styles emerged around this time. - Children were innocent and loveable almost
the opposite of adults. Now, children were
exempted from adult roles. - Families had become child-centered and were now
expected to nurture the child. - The mother was also sentimentalized by now and
was expected to be the primary nurturer of the
children, giving them love.
41How was the child seen before industrialization?
- Most agrarian cultures did not recognize
childhood because they attached adult roles to
children beginning around 8 or 9 years old. - Farming families needed as much labor as they
could get, so the child was quickly given
economic roles and was expected to learn skills
in an apprenticeship system. - Agrarian families were work-centered and used
strict physical discipline upon the child. - Spare the rod, spoil the child.
- In Puritanical America adults were expected to
beat the devil out of the child when they
misbehaved. - The original Grimms Fairy Tales were quite dark
and graphic, but as childhood emerged they were
softened and sweetened with happy endings.
42Adolescence
- Emerged around 1880, as it was necessary to
postpone adulthood even more in order to further
educate the population. - The college system became available to an
expanding middle class around this time. - Industrial societies require a mass workforce
that delivers professional, specialized services. - Adolescence is a new stage in a rapidly changing
society. It is a relatively anomic stage and can
be confusing to teenagers. - Contradictory demands and mixed messages
- Physically, the teen is an adult capable of
reproduction but socially, the teen is treated
as a dependent. - American society poorly equips individuals for
the challenges of adolescence.
43Mature adulthood
- This is the stage where anticipatory
socialization is basically completed, and the
individuals core identity is formed. - Responsible roles (career, marriage, parenthood)
demand a responsible, stable self. - However, modern rapidly-changing society poses
problems for adults. Rapid social change
destabilizes jobs and marriages, threatening the
stability of the self. - Generally this is the most enjoyable life stage
because one is most socially productive during
this period. - Suicide rates are relatively low for this life
stage.
44Old Age
- Modern society is less successful at facing old
age than traditional societies. Our society
worships youth. - Traditional societies show respect for senior
citizens. - Traditional (slow-change) cultures allow seniors
to have wisdom experiential knowledge relevant
to young people. They also place seniors within
the extended family system and the community,
giving them visibility. - In rapidly changing modern cultures, the
knowledge of seniors may be obsolete and
irrelevant to young people. - They also tend to disappear due to the emphasis
on the nuclear family in Western cultures. - Finally, in modern societies seniors have fewer
constructive or productive roles. - Hence, there is an increase in ageism in modern
societies.
45Death
- Industrial societies postpone death an additional
20 years beyond the life expectancy of agrarian
societies. - The life expectancy of the typical middle-class
American is almost 80 years today. - American culture does not socialize people to
deal with death. - Consequently, death is a taboo subject.
- We use euphemisms like passed away.
46What explains the death taboo?
- 1. Individualism. Americans see themselves as the
tree, not the leaf on the tree, so death means
the end of everything. Also, we stress being in
control, yet death is beyond our control. - 2. Faith in technology to conquer everything,
even death. We learn that death is something to
conquer rather than accept the naturalness of
death. - 3. Decline of religious influence that defines
death as heaven. If there is a heaven, one can
look forward to it. - 4. Institutional differentiation has created
specialized institutions like hospitals and
nursing homes that hide the dying process. It
becomes more mysterious. - 5. Rising sentimentalism and emotional intensity
of the family experience makes a family death
more painful.
47The history of death perception Source is
Philippe Aries
- 1. Until the 12th century, people didnt perceive
themselves as individuals. Rather, they were part
of nature, society, and the collective destiny.
Ones own death did not mean a lot. - 2. From the 12th to the 15th century, people
began to see themselves as individuals. This led
to the beginning of wills, tombs, and a death
anxiety. - 3. Beginning in the 18th century through the
Victorian Era, the intensity of the family
experience led people to fear the loss of a
family member more than their own death. Mourning
took on hysterical tones. - 4. By the 20th century death became a taboo
subject and people tried to avoid the emotions it
caused. Death cut into happiness. Hushed up
procedures in hospitals replaced home deaths.
Death was hidden from children. Fear of death
increased.
48The dying process
- Today it is excluded from our lives. Death occurs
not within the family environment but often in a
bureaucratic hospital or nursing ward, surrounded
by strangers. - What is the role expectation attached to the
dying? We expect the dying to keep it to
themselves. This is harmful. - Research reveals that people seem to die more
happily if death is openly discussed beforehand. - Yet the death taboo prohibits this discussion in
many families. - Talking about death frankly with others
encourages our acceptance of it as a natural
process.
49Erik Erikson
- According to Erik Erikson, human development does
not end at age 6 or 7. It continues over the
lifetime. - Erikson presented a social-psychological
examination of life challenges across 8 stages.
50Erik Erikson 8 stages of life challenges
- 1. Infancy (0-1.5 years old). The challenge of
trust versus mistrust of others. - 2. Toddlerhood (1.5 - 3 years old). The challenge
of autonomy and confidence versus doubt and
shame. - 3. Pre-school (3-5). Initiative vs. guilt from
not pleasing parents expectations. - 4. Pre-adolescents (6 13). Industriousness to
make friends vs. inferiority and failure to
measure up to school and social standards. - 5. Adolescents (teens). To establish ones own
identity vs. identity confusion. - 6. Young adulthood. Maintaining intimacy vs.
social isolation. - 7. Middle adulthood. Making a difference vs.
self-absorption and complacency. - 8. Old age. Integrity and satisfaction vs.
despair and regret.
51Conclusion
- Socialization is never fully successful.
- We retain a measure of free will that makes our
choices in life unique to ourselves.
52End of Chapter 5