Examples of Family Life in the following topics:
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- A consumer's family is one of the most significant factors because a family helps shape an individual's attitudes and behaviors .
- Another aspect of understanding the impact of families on buying behavior is the family life cycle.
- Most, though certainly not all, individuals and families pass through an orderly sequence of life stages that can be used to understand their purchasing patterns.
- Understanding the family life cycle is beneficial for marketers because it helps in defining target customers.
- Describe how family dynamics and the family life cycle can influence purchasing decisions
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- Family life, including marriage, childbearing and household composition are strongly influenced by social class.
- Historically, working class rural populations in agrarian regions have had larger families than wealthier urban families.
- Family life - marriage and childbearing patterns, household composition, and home stability - are strongly influenced by social class.
- Social class has both a cause and an effect relationship with family composition.
- Give examples for effects of social class on marriage, birth rates, and family composition
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- Why do families exist?
- What if you were raised by your grandparents and your parents played little to no role in your life or if you grew up in an orphanage or the foster care system?
- This notion of parents and children as family is called a nuclear family and is a recent invention of the Western World that has (in some cases) been sold as a form of "tradition. " It is a social construct that does not necessarily reflect the reality of family life for many people.
- In fact, with recent developments in the U.S., the nuclear family is no longer the primary form of social life in the U.S.
- The nuclear family emerged during the late medieval period and was formalized during the Council of Trent, in which marriage was defined as, "The conjugal union of man and woman, contracted between two qualified persons, which obliges them to live together throughout life. " While a variety of family structures continue to exist around the world today, including polygamous and polygynous families in many societies (including the U.S., the predominant form is built upon monogamous sexual and emotional relations (though, as noted above, this is no longer the majority form).
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- Of these, only two families have RNA genomes and only five are enveloped.
- The Inoviridae are a family of filamentous bacteriophages.
- There are two genera in this family: Inovirus and Plectrovirus.
- A number of exceptions to this life cycle are known.
- Although the majority of species in this family have lytic life cycles, a few may have temperate life cycles.
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- Viral hemorrhagic fevers (VHFs) are a group of illnesses that are caused by several distinct families of RNA viruses.
- The viral hemorrhagic (or haemorrhagic) fevers (VHFs) are a diverse group of animal and human illnesses that may be caused by five distinct families of RNA viruses: the families Arenaviridae, Filoviridae, Bunyaviridae, Flaviviridae, and Rhabdoviridae.
- Some of the VHF agents cause relatively mild illnesses, such as the Scandinavian nephropathia epidemica, while others, such as the African Ebola virus, can cause severe, life-threatening disease.
- Four families of RNA viruses have been recognized as causing this syndrome:
- The family Filoviridae include Ebola virus and Marburg virus.
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- People form political values throughout their life cycle through different agents of political socialization, including family, media, and education.
- Family: Glass (1986) recognizes family as a primary influence in the development of a child's political orientation, mainly due to constant relationship between parents and child, detailed in the table Family as a Primary Influence below.
- Family - Most important shaper of basic attitudes Teaches basic political values & loyalty to particular political party
- Some activists developed more favorable attitudes toward government as they matured, had families, and became homeowners.
- People who have not participated in politics much throughout their life may participate more in retirement.
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- Gender role theory posits that boys and girls learn the appropriate behavior and attitudes from the family with which they grow up.
- Families divide responsibilities between parents.
- In many American families, the father serves as the breadwinner, while the mother maintains the household.
- Family is the most important agent of socialization because it serves as the center of a child's life.
- Justify how the family acts as the most important agent of gender socialization for children and adolescents
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- Family types that are replacing the traditional nuclear family include single parent families, cohabitation, and gay and lesbian families.
- The sociology of the family examines the family as an institution and a unit of socialization.
- Sociological studies of the family look at demographic characteristic of the family members: family size, age, ethnicity and gender of its members, social class of the family, the economic level and mobility of the family, professions of its members, and the education levels of the family members.
- He or she may share a relationship with a partner, but lead a single life style.
- Examine the different types of families and the changing face of family roles
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- The term "family economy" can be used to describe the family as an economic unit.
- High mortality rates and low productivity meant that on the farms and in towns, life was short and living conditions were harsh.
- The family economic unit is dependent on the specialized labor of family members.
- Women's "proper sphere," according to the ideology, is the private realm of domestic life, child-rearing, housekeeping, and religious education.
- Women were considered passive, dependent on men, and due to their reproductive capacity, ill-suited for life outside of the domestic realm.
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- Student achievement is highly correlated with family characteristics, including household income and parental educational attainment.
- Not only do wealthier students tend to attend better-funded schools, but they often also benefit from family background characteristics.
- In fact, family background may be even more important than school funding.
- Educational deficits resulting from inequality also affect future life trajectories.
- Examine the various factors within family background that give students an advantage in the educational realm