Navigation » List of Schools » California State University, Northridge » Family and Consumer Sciences » FCS 340 – Marriage and Family Relations 3 » Spring 2019 » Chapter 3 Quiz
Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:
Question #1
A Unlike contemporary children, Puritan children were expected to be extraordinarily well behaved, and docile.
B Unlike contemporary children, Puritan children were not believed to be born with original sin.
C Unlike contemporary children, Puritan children were encouraged to question the government’s authority, and scripture.
D Unlike contemporary children, Puritan children were not allowed to attend school till they reached puberty.
Question #2
A easy to accomplish and fairly common
B not necessary as there was no formal marriage
C not acceptable by the laws of the land
D rare because divorcees were looked down upon
Question #3
A existentialism
B familism
C individualism
D consumerism
Question #4
A Despite the treaty, the US government confiscated the land of most Mexican families in the territory.
B Despite the treaty, Mexicans grew wealthy by the sale of their properties to American farmers.
C The provisions of the treaty guaranteed security of property for Mexican landowners.
D The treaty ensured that Mexican landowners were not defrauded by land speculators.
Question #5
A Girls were expected to be educated.
B The female head of the family had all the authority.
C Women were considered guardians of family traditions.
D Boys did not share domestic chores.
Question #6
A familism
B vigilantism
C machismo
D compadrazgo
Question #7
A less focused on sexual attraction between partners
B less focused on communication between parents and children
C more focused on physical punishments as a way of discipline
D more focused on the importance of mutual affection
Question #8
A The cult of domesticity
B Helicopter parenting
C Superwoman
D Compadrazgo
Question #9
A be assertive and demand that their husbands participate in child care
B pursue an active career to be more satisfied individuals
C please their husbands and be full-time homemakers
D get a college education in order to be better wives and mothers
Question #10
A were not allowed to work in factories
B made the least economic gains of all women
C were recruited into high-paying jobs
D took over the domestic work left by other women
Question #11
A there was a demand for low-paid domestic help
B women were perceived to be more productive than men
C there was a demand for inexpensive midwives
D rural women were more adept at factory work
Question #12
A Stanley’s sister
B only Stanley
C Stanley’s father
D both Stanley and his sister
Question #13
A Low-income mortgages were not available to the public during this period.
B Veterans were offered homes at the same rate as the general public in the suburbs.
C There was a very small demand for housing during this period.
D The federal government underwrote the construction of homes in the suburbs.
Question #14
A They were free of domestic violence.
B They had equal opportunities for education.
C They were expected to be responsible only for domestic chores.
D They worked outside homes even if they had children.
Question #15
A The number of two-income families decreased.
B The number of married people in the population increased.
C The number of one-parent households increased.
D The number of adult children living with their parents decreased.
Question #16
A More women entered colleges than in the sixties.
B Families had lower divorce rates than in the sixties.
C More married couples had children at a younger age than in the sixties.
D Families had higher birth rates than in the sixties.
Question #17
A accepted without discrimination
B forced to keep it a secret
C imprisoned as an offender
D popular and looked upon
Question #18
A Kinship between family members quickly weakened and a majority of families broke up.
B Couples didn’t bother to legitimize their marriages as the fee was equal to two weeks’ pay.
C Many mothers set out to find children from whom they had been separated many years earlier.
D Communication between single black men who migrated to the North and their families in the South stopped completely.
Question #19
A Most marriages were polygynous.
B No groups practiced monogamy.
C The majority of tribes were matrilineal.
D Marriages and customs differed from tribe to tribe.
Question #20
A bundling
B camping
C swaddling
D dating