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Exam 1

Navigation   » List of Schools  »  California State University, Northridge  »  Sociology  »  Soc 348 – Juvenile Delinquency  »  2019  »  Exam 1

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Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:

Question #1
A  the media
B  heredity
C  sociobiology and heredity
D  sociobiology
Question #2
A  females being treated with more leniency by police
B  male police officer who are respectful of delinquent women
C  females being suspected less for criminal behavior and male police officer who are respectful of delinquent women
D  females being suspected less for criminal behavior
Question #3
A  frustration hypothesis
B  liberation hypothesis
C  maturation hypothesis
D  gender gap hypothesis
Question #4
A  social aggression
B  indirect aggression
C  relational aggression
D  physical aggression
Question #5
A  their relations with others
B  their appearance
C  their academic abilities
D  their athletic abilities
Question #6
A  deterrence and rational theory
B  rational choice theory
C  feminist theory
D  deterrence theory
Question #7
A  individuals who are still in school from committing delinquent acts
B  others from committing similar acts
C  an individual from committing similar acts in the future
D  all of the above apply
Question #8
A  the responsibility of such choices can be blamed on society
B  the responsibility is on both the individual and society
C  the responsibility for such choices can never be fully understood
D  the responsibility and accountability is directly on him/her
Question #9
A  delinquency during adolescence but do not go on to commit more crimes as adults
B  criminal behaviors throughout their adult years but were never delinquent as teens
C  antisocial behaviors at an early age and persist through their entire life
D  criminal behaviors due to mental illness not detected in infancy
Question #10
A  children who are overly anxious about crime
B  portraying delinquents as dangerous threats to social order
C  real-life delinquent activities as fun and entertaining
D  programs that are focused on education
Question #11
A  the youth’s relative position among other teenagers
B  personal health
C  religiosity
D  level of educational attainment
Question #12
A  is no longer important
B  is accepted by all sociologists as a valid explanation of delinquency
C  departs from more established and accepted criminological theories
D  conforms to the more accepted criminological theories
Question #13
A  notion of a developmental process that precedes the attainment of a deviant or delinquent identity and career
B  view that delinquents eventually outgrow their deviancy and conform to the values of society
C  idea that people from the same environment are motivated by different factors
D  suggestion that there is a difference between a deviant identity and deviant career
Question #14
A  deviance cannot be seen
B  deviance is the same to all
C  deviance, like beauty, exists in the eyes of the beholder
D  deviance really does not exist
Question #15
A  when the deviant act is committed by a person under the age of ten
B  when a deviant act is instigated by the parent
C  when an individual may commit a deviant act (or several deviant acts but does not internalize the deviant self-concept and continues to occupy the role of conformist
D  when an individual’s self-concept is altered and the deviant role is personally assumed
Question #16
A  solitary confinement
B  the greater evil lies in the societal treatment, not in the original act
C  special privileges should be given to special prisoners
D  inadequate medical care in prison
Question #17
A  the type of prison used to incarcerate convicted felons
B  the treatment of the offender that makes a hardened criminal out of the accidental or occasional one
C  the type of treatment used to incarcerate those convicted of misdemeanors
D  the privileges given to incarcerated individuals
Question #18
A  relative unimportance
B  having no effect on future behavior
C  causing a variety of activities
D  a catalyst for eliciting future behavior of the prescribed kind
Question #19
A  when people define a situation as real, it becomes real in its consequences
B  situations can cause serious consequences
C  situations are defined differently
D  no situation is ever the same
Question #20
A  only social roles
B  only social expectations
C  only social status
D  social status, social roles, and social expectations
Question #21
A  accepted the idea that delinquency is an inherent potentiality in all human beings
B  were not interested in delinquency
C  supported the social control theorists’ explanations of juvenile delinquency
D  rejected the notion that delinquency is an inherent potentiality in all human beings
Question #22
A  They have absolutely no social bonds
B  They have relatively weak social bonds and consequently feel little remorse for violations of generally accepted social standards
C  They have a great deal of remorse
D  They have strong social bonds
Question #23
A  unchanging
B  occasionally free to “drift”
C  locked into a particular situation
D  an immoral person
Question #25
A  represents the ability of a person to resist temptations
B  applies only to juveniles
C  cannot be applied to juveniles
D  does not vary among individuals
Question #26
A  membership in a street gang or participation in a criminal subculture
B  mental conflict and anxiety
C  alienation and frustration
D  pride and self-worth
Question #27
A  they have a strong religious background
B  come from a hard-working background
C  they have been rewarded for doing so
D  they come from a wealthy background
Question #28
A  have no effect on juveniles
B  are ignored by most youth
C  can become viable role models for some youngsters
D  have no effect on females
Question #29
A  loses interest in society
B  can never become a law-abiding citizen
C  will become a ward of the state
D  slips into juvenile delinquency
Question #32
A  in the rural outreaches of the city
B  in jail
C  in the suburbs
D  in areas adjacent to the central business district and to heavy industrial areas
Question #33
A  not identifiable
B  really not that important
C  uniform throughout the population
D  not uniform throughout the population
Question #34
A  rebellion-oriented gang
B  retreatist-oriented gang
C  conflict-oriented gang
D  crime-oriented gang
Question #35
A  average boys.
B  middle class juveniles
C  the behavior of lower class juveniles
D  abused children
Question #37
A  retreatism
B  innovation
C  ritualism
D  conformity
Question #38
A  arrest rates
B  local government
C  economic status
D  prevailing social conditions
Question #39
A  suicide rates drop dramatically
B  the rules that restrain us from socially unacceptable acts can become weak or suspended
C  the police and military must then take over in order to preserve social stability
D  people will reach out to social institutions such as the family and religion in order to regain a sense of stability
Question #40
A  neglect the causes of juvenile delinquency
B  prefer not to comment on the causes of juvenile delinquency
C  are not unanimous in pinpointing the exact causes of juvenile delinquency
D  are unanimous in pinpointing the exact causes of juvenile delinquency
Question #41
A  normal childhood behavior and boys will be boys
B  adults, adolescents, children and juveniles
C  bullies, victims, and interlopers
D  conduct disorder , diagnosis , and the later stages
Question #43
A  subjected to intense scrutiny and criticism by subsequent investigators
B  totally ignored
C  accepted by most criminologists
D  adopted by all foreign scholars as definitive conclusions concerning the cause of criminal behavior
Question #44
A  jam up the court system so much that most juvenile offenders would be adults before their case was heard in court
B  only further encourage juveniles to break the law, as well as to hide their behavior better
C  result in the elimination of the Juvenile court system altogether
D  not only encourage the reformation of offenders, but discourage criminality in the general populace
Question #45
A  victims have never filed any police complaint
B  victims are the only source of information
C  victims distrust surveys
D  victims really do not care to answer the questions
Question #46
A  divert the matter away from the court system
B  let the parents handle the case
C  dismiss the case
D  send the juvenile directly to juvenile detention or foster care
Question #47
A  only because of the frequency of occurrence
B  only because of the likelihood of being reported to the police
C  only because of their seriousness
D  because of their seriousness, frequency of occurrence, and likelihood of being reported to the police
Question #48
A  it in fact measures whatever it is supposed to measure
B  it produces results
C  the average person believes it
D  it yields the same results upon repetition of the measuring procedure or repetition by other investigators
Question #49
A  prescriptive norms
B  outdated
C  proscriptive norms
D  negative norms
Question #50
A  are referred to as status offenses
B  are not illegal when done by adults
C  are prohibited for juveniles
D  all of the above