1. What anthropologist was the one who stated that Culture is Learned?
a. Boas
b. White
c. Linton
d. Malinowski
e. Mead
2.The potential power of individuals and groups to contest cultural norms, values, symbols, mental maps of reality, institutions, and structures of power.
a. Agency
b. Hegemony
c. Power
d. None of the above
3.A key anthropological research strategy involving both participation in and observation of the daily life of the people being studied.
a. Ethnology
b. Fieldwork
c. Participant Observation
d. Ethnographic studies
4.A community member who advises the anthropologist on community issues, provides feedback, but is not allowed to warn against cultural miscues is known as a Key informant.
a. True
b. False
5.A form of interview that traces the biography of a person over time, examining changes and illuminating the interlocking network of relationships in the community would be Life History.
a. True
b. Fales
6.The analysis of the physical and / or geographic space where fieldwork is being conducted.
a. Geography
b. Mapping
c. Proxemics
d. Environment
7.The analysis and comparison of ethnographic data across cultures.
a. Emic
b. Ethnographic
c. Ethnology
d. Mapping
8.Desription of local behavior and beliefs from the anthropologist's perspective in ways that can be compared across cultures.
a. Emic
b. Etic
c. Ethnology
d. Values
e. Norms
9.The study of the sounds, symbols, and gestures of a language, and their combination into forms that communicate meaning.
a. Cultural linguistics
b. Descriptive linguistics
c. Symbolic linguistics
d. Kinesics
10.The smallest units of sounds that carry meaning on their own.
a. Syntax
b. Morphemes
c. Grammar
d. Lexicon
11.The study of the relationship between body movements and communication.
a. Linguistics
b. Language
c. Kinesics
d. Ebonics
12.A framework for considering the span of human history within the much larger age of the universe and planet Earth.
a. Deep space
b. Deep time
c. Geologic time
d. Prehistoric time
13.The environment process by which some organisms, with features that enable them to adapt to the environment in order to survive and reproduce, thereby increasing the frequency of those features in population.
a. DNA
b. Mutation
c. Natural Selection
d. Mutagen
14.A derivation from the standard DNA code.
a. DNA
b. Mutation
c. Natural Selection
d. Mutagen
e. None of the above
15.The inherited genetic factors that provide the framework for an organism's physical form and the ways genes are expressed in an organism's physical form as a result of the above interaction with environmental factors. (be careful as you need to have the answer in correct order).
a. Genotype-phenotype
b. Phenotype-genotype
c. Genotype-mutation
d. Phenotype-mutagen
16.The phenotypic differences between males and females of the same species.
a. Sexuality
b. Sex
c. Gender
d. Sexual dimorphism
17.The way gender identity is expressed through action.
a. Sexuality
b. Gender performance
c. Gender roles
d. Sexual dimorphism
e. Sexual identity
18.A gender identity or performance that does not fit with cultural norms related to one's assigned sex at birth.
a. Intersexed
b. Alternate sex
c. Transsexual
d. Transgender
e. Homosexual