Unit 1 Assessment You should use this file to complete your Assessment. • The first thing you need to do is save a copy of this document, either onto your computer or a USB drive • Then work through your Assessment, remembering to save your work regularly • When you’ve finished, print out a copy to keep for reference • Then, go to www.vision2learn.com and send your completed Assessment to your tutor via your My Study area – make sure it is clearly marked with your name, the course title and the Unit and Assessment number. Please note that this Assessment document has 16 pages and is made up of 5 Parts. Name: Part 1: Understanding equality This section will help you to evidence Learning Outcome 1: Know the meaning of …show more content…
Not | |Stereotyping |understanding what kind of person they are and not taking the time to find out. | | | | | |Prejudice is to make a judgement without knowing the facts or knowledge. This is wrong | |Prejudice |and unfair. | | | | | |Labelling is to put someone in group, i.e. she is from Hull so loud and brash. This is | |Labelling |labelling someone because of where they are from. It is very similar to stereotyping | | |but unfortunately once you are labelled it can stick. | | | | | | |
Please note that this Assessment document has 13 pages and is made up of 9 Sections.
Please note that this Assessment document has 7 pages and is made up of 3 Sections.
Please note that this Assessment document has 9 pages and is made up of 9 Sections.
Please note that this Assessment document has 8 pages and is made up of 3 Parts.
Please note that this Assessment document has 14 pages and is made up of 4 Parts.
Please note that this Assessment document has 15 pages and is made up of 7 Parts.
Please note that this assessment document has 9 pages and is made up of 4 Parts.
• Then, go to www.vision2learn.com and send your completed Assessment to your tutor via your My Study area – make sure it is clearly marked with your name, the course title and the Unit and Assessment number.
• Then, go to www.vision2learn.com and send your completed Assessment to your tutor via your My Study area – make sure it is clearly marked with your name, the course title and the Unit and Assessment number.
One may ask what is a socially constructed label? Is it the way society labels individuals by the color or one’s skin or the culture from which individuals affiliate them self’s with? Race is a socially constructed label means that individuals from different cultures or ethnics tend to label the different types of race’s that are known in different community’s and see them different from their own and tend to judge one another’s culture. During the readings that were assigned it came down to whether law enforcement officials tend to label social action by the different cultures and minority’s in different areas and the way they approached and dealt with the minority groups.
Unfortunately, this process involves creating tight little boxes for every individual to fit neatly into. Although it is easy to acknowledge the complex fluidity and elasticity of human identity, very few people successfully avoid the provocative grasps of stereotypes.
Please note that this Assessment has 6 pages and is made up of 3 Sections.
At first, labeling can be a very successful way to keep a group of people from advancing. Also, it can cause the labeled group to feel hopeless. Anne Frank described it as a time, “When all ideals are being swallowed and destroyed, and people showing their worst side, and do not know whether to believe in truth and right in God” (263). Jews could not own a bicycle.
Labelling is a word which is applied to a person which can be considered to sum that person up. This may result in the person losing their identity and so they may be treated less
Labeling theory is closely related to social-construction and symbolic-interaction analysis. It means that deviance is not a natural tendency of an individual, but instead focuses on the tendency of majorities to negatively label minorities or those seen as deviant from standard cultural norms. The theory is based off how people tend to own up to what society claims them to be. The theory came about during the 1960s and 1970s. A lot of the theory’s symptoms are still noticeable today.