Lecture 5 Socialization
Lecture 5 Socialization
Socialization:
lifelong social experience by which individuals develop their
human potential and learn culture.
Social experience: the foundation for the personality
Criticisms:
-childhood experiences lasting importance in socialization
process?
--sex as a basic human drive? --theory difficult to test scientifically
(B) Jean Piaget (1896-1980)
Cognitive development: 4 stages
Criticism:
(1)applicability in all societies?
(2) theory based on research using exclusively male subjects
(D) Carol Gilligan (1982, 1990): gender and moral
development
1. boys: a justice model stressing formal
rulesjustice perspective
2. girls: caring and responsibility and less on
the rules responsibility perspective
Criticism:
not adequately address the issue of the origin of the
gender
(E) George Herbert Mead (1863-1931): The social self.
1. Self: personality
composed of an individuals self-
awareness and self-image.
(a) emerges from social experience
(b) social experience based
on the exchange of symbols.
(c) understanding someones
intentions requires imagining the
situation from that persons point of view-- taking the role of
the other.
Criticism:
ignoring the role of biology in the development
Agents of Socialization
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=526pL1fXmRY
hidden curriculum
anticipatory socializationthe
process of social learning directed toward
gaining a desired position, commonly
occurs among peers.
4. Mass media: impersonal communications
Television;
Others forms of
communications?
Socialization and the Life Course
(1)Childhood: not grounded in biology
(2) Adulthood:
(a)early adulthood--working toward goals set
earlier in life
(a) middle adulthood: greater reflectiveness.
a two-stage process:
1. The staff breaks down the new inmates existing
identity.
2. The staff tries to build a new self conform to the
current social values.