Having spent my entire childhood living in very small, rural areas of Wisconsin, I was rarely exposed to diversity. My undergraduate education at Loyola University Chicago introduced and allowed me to interact with a range of people from various cultures and ethnicities. This newfound experience taught me that people see and interpret things differently and that cultural beliefs are not the only factors that influence differences in opinion. The community, environment, and even one’s friends can also contribute to the way a person interprets things.…
Question 1: Texas Nameplate Comapny, highlighted in the Performance Excellence Profile, is a small company with fewer than 50 employees and a high level of ethnic diversity. What challenges would such a firm face in implementing process design and control tools?…
Living in San Francisco with my mother and father was all I had ever known. There were several folks from Asia at my school and I even had classes with a few of them. My father woke me up and told me to come with him to the neighbor’s house since they had a radio. The Japanese had just bombed Pearl Harbor and the world was now a different place. While the war had been active in Europe for some time it seemed so far away and our lives were unaffected by the battles described in the newspaper and on the radio.…
I currently live in Blackwood New Jersey. This is a small town in New Jersey with a population of 4547 people in 2010. The community is composed of many cultures, races and religions. I find this to be one of the perks of living here is being accepted for my customs and race. I am African American, and even though my race only makes up a small percentage. The majority of the town is Caucasian, but African Americans make up the largest minority. Members of my close community look similar to me. There are a lot of mixed race people also in my close community. The…
In recent years, Canadian troops have been deployed to various parts of the world to maintain peace and order as part of the government’s commitments to their allies and the United Nations. As troops return home from their tour of duty, the main focus for military and civilian social workers across Canada is the reintegration of theses individuals back into society. Many of these solders experience a combination of mental health, financial and personal problems on their path to reintegration such as substance abuse, depression, post traumatic stress disorder and even homelessness (Savisky, Illingworth and DuLaney, 2009). Families with veterans may experience shock as soldiers return with physical injuries leading to many months of rehabilitation (Franklin,2009).…
I went to Ansbach Middle-High School. The school was shaped like a rectangle, also all the housing around us were just really tall rectangles, and the military base itself was just a rectangle. Looking back, the environment around me was very depressing and boring. There was a max of 300 hundred students at my school and that was spread through grades 7th-12th. There was no majority ethnicity in the school, instead there was a multitude of races that attended every year. I attended the school through 7th-11th grade. Even though I went to school for 5 years I didn't have an impact until my last year there. 11th grade was the turning point for me. I got involved with a program at my school called the Army Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps (JROTC). I joined this program at 9th grade and treated it as another class till my junior…
When I was in fourth grade, I remember my Dad getting home from work with the news that we might be moving to Italy on orders from the Navy. The feeling of being uprooted and losing all my friends and familiar surroundings was all too familiar to myself and my siblings.…
There are whites, Asians and other ethnicities but not nearly as much as Hispanics and African Americans. My parents moved a lot and from what I remember all the neighborhoods we lived in were made of mostly Hispanics, maybe one or two black families. It seemed like black families stuck to their own neighborhoods and Hispanics to their own as well. My values were very similar with the left side of my house neighbors, right side of my house, and neighbors from across the street. All my friends I hung out with were Hispanic, not because I am racist but because I really had no other choice, they were all Hispanic families in my neighborhood. Their homes were very similar to my home. They had religious pictures, watched the same shows my parents did, and acted the same way my family did. I was very comfortable going inside their homes because they made me feel like I was home. We had the same values. The religion we believed in, how the parents disciplined their kids and other different values as well. I had black friends at school but I never went over to their homes because my parents never allowed me to go further than 3 or 4 houses down the…
Coming to America from my native born country of Afghanistan was definitely a change to get a grasp of. Growing up here, diversity is very common. I believe United States is definitely a melting pot. We have people from all over the world settle here to create a better life. Growing up in the city of Saint Louis, I would say that diversity was a very common thing. I lived in a street where their were elderly American folks, African -Americans, Mexicans, and Bosnians. I was exposed to a diverse group of people at an early age. Low income communities such as the ones I have lived in tends to be the most diverse as oppose to living in Ladue where their the superior white race is the most common. Diversity is something that I have been comfortable with my whole life, being exposed to it as soon as I came to America definitely has shaped my mentality on this subject in a positive manner. During High school and my college life I have worked at various jobs such as Steak N’ Shake,…
One significant experiance in my life has been my dad being in the Millitary. My dad was in the Millitary for a short time of one year before he decided it wasnt for him. But in that one year we moved two times. We moved from my hometown of Anacortes Washington to California. I started school and things werent that bad, I made friends and had a park right across the street from my house! life was good. But then we had to move again, to Arizona. We moved from sea side California to the Arizona Dessart. This is where I was really challanged, I didnt make friends as easy as the first move. We moved from a spacious town house with a park to a tiny appartment with no backyard. I distanced myself from my parents and everyone else in my family, I…
Socialisation is an interactive and dynamic process by which children make sense of their lives. It is the process through which a child becomes an active competent participant in one or more communities.…
Professional Socialization is defined as the process by which individuals acquire the specialized knowledge, skills, attitudes, values, norms and interest needed to perform their professional roles acceptably( Maclntrye, Murray, & Teel, 2009). There is formal and informal socialization. Formal socialization involves planned experiences, such as performing physical assessments, developing nursing diagnoses, and client teaching. Informal socialization involves lessons learned incidentally while functioning as a nurse. Professional Socialization is a learning process.…
When I was growing up as a child my father was an Army officer, and we moved to a different post every three years. When you are young child this changes your whole world, I lived in rural Louisiana,…
Jarvis (2006) defines socialisation as ‘the process whereby people acquire the rules of behaviour and the systems of beliefs and attitudes that form part of life in their society’. Socialisation influences the way people think, believe and act. Socialisation occurs through different types of interactions between human beings such as family and peers. It helps build their personal identity and personality. In this essay, my socialisation as an individual will be discussed and links between my socialisation and significant social processes will be identified.…
1) What do sociologists mean by the concept of socialisation & how useful it is in understanding human behaviour?…