- Recognition Questions (knowledge - simple recall)
- A society where daughters are expected to remain in their parents' household and the sons move in with their wives is called:
- A matrilocal society
- A neolocal society
- A matriarchal society
- A bilateral society
- A group of relatives by marriage constitute:
- A conjugal family
- An extended family
- A nuclear family
- None of the above
- People who are related by blood are kin. (True or False?)
Recall Questions (Comprehension - shows understanding)
- Describe the major differences among patrilineal, matrilineal, and bilateral societies.
- Define:
- Extended family
- Nuclear family
Application Question (use the information in a new context)
- Sammy's parents had a party for him on his fifth birthday. They invited both sets of grandparents, and Sammy's father's brother and his children. This is called a gathering of:
- A consanguine family
- A conjugal family
- An egalitarian family
- A patriarchal family
Analysis Questions (connecting patterns, identifying hidden meanings)
- Explain the patrilocal society in terms of lineage and dominance of the sexes.
- Explain the term conjugal families, by making reference to the different types of societies to which they could belong.
- Kin can be best analyzed by examining:
- The society to which they belong
- Their pattern of descent
- Their form of family organization
- The type of family unit to which they belong
Synthesis Questions (relate knowledge from several areas)
- Explain why it is likely that a matriarchal family system would be found in a matrilocal or matrilineal society
- Which one of these combinations of society descriptions is unlikely to exist within one society:
- Neolocal, egalitarian, nuclear
- Patrilocal, patrilineal, patrilocal
- Bilateral, egalitarian, nuclear
- Extended family, conjugal family, kin
Evaluation Question (assess value of theories)- Describe the economic consequence of a neolocal society.
- Support your description with information you have learned from this course.
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