- •390 1 English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •Strain and Conflict
- •392 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •394 I EnQlish for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •Unit VIII
- •Kinds of Groups
- •II. Answer the following questions:
- •396 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •XIII. Translate the following sentences into Russian:
- •XIV. Read and translate the text:
- •XV. Answer the following questions:
- •402 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •XVI. Contradict the following statements. Start your sentence with: «Quite on the contrary...»
- •XVII. Ask your friend:
- •Give examples of primary and secondary groups.
- •Characterize in brief:
- •404 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •Networks
- •406 | English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •V. Answer the following questions:
- •Unit IX
- •Group Dynamics
- •III. Answer the following questions:
- •4'* I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •VIII. Read the text again and note the difference between ingroups and outgroups.
- •IX. Prepare a report «Group Dynamics and Society». Unitx
- •I. Read and translate the text:
- •Deviance
- •4/6 | English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •418 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •VII. Speak on:
- •VIII. Translate the text in writing:
- •2. People become deviant as others define them that way.
- •420 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •Unit XI
- •422 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •II. Answer the following questions:
- •424 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •XII. Answer the following questions:
- •428 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •Unit XII
- •IV. Answer the following questions:
- •Fourth Dimension
- •434 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •The Golden Mean
- •436 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •VI. Answer the following questions:
- •440 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •VIII. Answer the following questions:
- •442 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •444 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •Make up disjunctive questions:
- •445 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •V. What problems are similar for both countries?
- •44Д I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •Mass society
- •450 | English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •7Exrs for written translation I 453
- •III. Translate the text in writing.
- •454 1 English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •455 1 English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •460 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •1. Spencer and His Time
- •VII. Translate the text in writing:
- •466 | English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •VIII. Translate the text in writing:
- •468 | English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •470 1 English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •47Г | English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •P resent simple
- •II. Complete the following sentences:
- •Past simple
- •478 I Enalish for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •Present perfect
- •480 1 English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •482 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •II. Analyze and translate the sentences with participles:
- •484 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •486 | English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •488 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •490 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •494 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •XIII. Read and translate the sentences with complex subject:
- •495 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •XIV. Translate the following conditional sentences:
- •XV. Translate the following conditional sentences:
- •498 | English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •XVI. Read, analyze and translate:
- •XVII. Read and translate the following sentences:
- •Vocabulary 500 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •Vocabulary I 5o3
- •504 I English for Psychologists and Sociologists
- •Vocabulary I s°5
- •Vocabulary I s07
- •Vocabulary 1 509
VIII. Read the text again and note the difference between ingroups and outgroups.
IX. Prepare a report «Group Dynamics and Society». Unitx
I. Read and translate the text:
Deviance
What is Deviance?
The concept of deviance is defined as violation of cultural norms of a group or all of society. Since cultural norms affect such a wide range of human activities, the concept of deviance is correspondingly broad. The most obvious and familiar type of deviance is crime - the violation of cultural norms that have been formally enacted into criminal law. Criminal deviance is itself quite variable in content, from minor offenses such as traffic violations to serious crimes such as homicide and rape. Closely related to crime is juvenile delinquency — the violation of legal standards bv children or adolescents.
Deviance is not limited to crime, however. It includes many other types of nonconformity, from the mild to the extreme, such as left-handedness, boastfulness, and Mohawk hairstyles, as well as pacifism, homosexuality, and mental illness. Industrial societies contain a wide range of subcultures that display distinctive attitudes, appearance, and behaviour. Consequently, to those who conform to society's dominant cultural standards, artists, homeless people, and members of various ethnic minorities may seem deviant. In addition, the poor - whose lack of financial resources makes conforming to many conventional middleclass patterns of life difficulty - are also subject to definition as deviant. Physical traits, too, may be the basis of deviance, as members of racial minorities in America know well. Men with manv highly
Sociology. UnitX I 4/5
visible tatoos on their body may be seen as deviant, as are women with any tatoo at all. Even being unusually tall or short, or grossly fat or exceedingly thin, may be the basis of deviance. Physical disabilities are yet another reason for being seen by others as deviant.
Deviance, therefore, is based on any dimension of difference that is considered to be significant and provokes a negative reaction that serves to make the deviant person an outsider. In addition to the experience of social isolation, deviance is subject to social control, by which others attempt to bring deviant people back into line. Like deviance itself, social control can take many forms. Socialization is a complex process of social control in which family, peer groups, and the mass media attempt to influence our attitudes and behaviour. A more formal type of social control is the criminal justice system — the formal process bv which society reacts to alleged violations of the law through the use of police, courts, and punishment. Social control does not have to take the form of a negative response to conformity. Praise from parents, high grades at school, laudatory mention in newspapers and other mass media, and positive recognition from officials in the local community are all forms of social control that serve to encourage conformity to conventional patterns of thought and behaviour.
II. Make up 10 questions to the text.
Divide the text into logical parts and give a heading to each part.
Give the leading sentence in each paragraph.
V. Speak on:
The concept of deviance.
The main causes of deviance.
The social control system.