2. OBJECTIVES:
1. Understand and discuss
the composition of society
based on the groups that
compose it;
2. Identify and define the
different types of groups in
4. Humans always move and live
in groups since ancient
times.
Humans bond and survive
together
5. What drives us to organize
society?
Is it due to our instinct to
survive? Or is it our nature to
build & destroy cities,
civilizations, cultures & then
build again?
14. ANALYSIS:
• What are the things or aspects you
consider in identifying social groups?
• Do you consider yourself as part of a
social group?
•How does it feel being one of the members
of a group?
• What makes a social group?
15. WHY THERE IS A NEED FOR SOCIAL
GROUP? DO WE REALLY DEPEND ON
IT?
• Everyone wants a sense of belonging
• Man is by nature a social being and he
interacts with others… (Aristotle)
• As members, we think of ourselves as a
special “WE”
16. GROUPS:
Smaller units that compose a
society;
Unit of interacting
personalities with an
interdependence of roles and
statuses existing between
17. IMPORTANCE OF
GROUPS:
1. Transmitter of culture
2. Means of social control
3. Socializes the individual
4. Sources of ideas
5. Trains the individual in
communication
18. SOCIAL GROUP
Is two or more people who identify
with and interact with one another
(Macionis, 2012).
19. SOCIAL GROUP
• It is where human beings come together
in couples, families, circles of friends,
churches, clubs, businesses,
25. NOT EVERY COLLECTION OF
INDIVIDUALS FORMS A GROUP…
SOCIAL CATEGORY
(people with a status in common )
shared social characteristic, like
gender, race, ethnicity, nationality, age,
class, etc.
26. SOCIAL CATEGORY
(people with a status in common )
women, homeowners,
soldiers, skilled workers,
professionals,
millionaires, college
graduates, and Roman
Catholics
27. NOT EVERY COLLECTION OF
INDIVIDUALS FORMS A GROUP…
CROWD – loosely formed
collection of people in one place
(e.g. students sitting in a large
stadium with interaction at a limited
extent).
30. SOCIAL
AGGREGATE
A social aggregate is a collection of people
who are in the same place at the same time,
but who otherwise do not necessarily have
anything in common, and who may not interact
with each other.
43. Small, intimate and less specialized group.
It is joined by primary relationships where people:
spend a great deal of time together,
engage in a wide range of activities
they feel that they know one another pretty
well.
1. PRIMARY
GROUP
44. 1. PRIMARY
GROUP• The first group we experience in life
• Members are bound to others by emotion and loyalty.
Share personal and long lasting relationships
Examples: Families, Factions, Play
Groups, Friendship Groups
45. 2. SECONDARY
GROUP
A large and impersonal social group
whose members pursue a specific goal or
activity.
Examples: Industrial Workers; business
associates, Faculty Staff, Company
Employees
46. •Involve weak emotional ties and
little personal knowledge of one
another.
• It includes many more people
(the reason why one another
couldn’t have a lasting
2. SECONDARY
GROUP
47. • It exist for only a short time,
beginning and ending without
particular significance
(e.g. students enrolled in the same course
at a university who may not see one another
after the semester ends)
2. SECONDARY
GROUP
48. PRIMARY GROUP SECONDARY GROUP
Intimate, personal &
informal relationships
Impersonal, formal,
distant relationships
Long term, sometimes
life long
Short term or
temporary
We develop our self-
identity or who we are
We meet our life long
partners through these
Family members, close
friends
Work, school,
associations, etc
58. 2. OUT-GROUPS
A social unit to which individuals do not
belong due to differences in social
categories and with which they do not
identify.
59. 2. OUT-GROUPS
EXAMPLE:
The Lasallians are Lasallians because they are
not Ateneans.
I play chess intensely that I do not hang-out
with basketball players.
60. 3. REFERENCE
GROUPS
Groups to which we consciously or
unconsciously refer when we evaluate
our life situations and behavior but to
which we do not necessarily belong.
61. 3. REFERENCE
GROUPS
The group is used to determine the
reference point in so far as the kind
of expected behaviour or norm one
should act or manifest.
62. 3. REFERENCE
GROUPS
A person can have multiple
reference groups.
It can be used as basis for what
someone aspires to be- role model.
63. 3. REFERENCE
GROUPS
Has great influence in the way we
create our own identities, the
groups we form & aspire us to be
what we want.
64. 4. NETWORK
a series or web of social ties
involving people or groups of
individuals connected to each
other.
79. 1. FORMAL
GROUPS
•Social organization
•Their goals are clearly stated & the division of
labor is based on member’s ability or merit
•Deliberately formed & their purpose & objectives
are defined
80. 2. BUREAUCRACY
•An administrative structure which is
aimed to enable members to meet
their goals;
•A hierarchical arrangement in large
scale
81. 2. BUREAUCRACY
•Formal organizations in which parts are
ordered in the manner of a pyramid based on
a division of function and authority
•Formal, rationally organized social structure
89. OBJECTIVES:
-Explain the function of the family
- Define kinship, marriage and household
- Enumerate and explain the different
forms of kinship by blood, kinship by
marriage and kinship by rituals
-Discuss the different types of families
93. • FAMILY
Is defined as a type of social
institution that unites people by
blood, kinship or alliance
one group within a society.
94. FAMILY
A typical family would consists
of the parents & their children
living in the same residence.
95. GEORGE PETER MURDOC
Family is a social group that has the following
characteristics:
1.Share common residence
2. Presence of economic
cooperation
96. 3. Includes adults of both sexes,
wherein at least two of whom uphold
a socially approved form of sexual
relationship.
5. Responsible for the socialization of
infants and children.
97. KINGSLEY DAVIS
Family is a group of individuals
wherein the relationship is based
on consanguinity and kinship.
108. • KINSHIP
•is one of the main
organizing principles of
society
• It is one of the basic social
institutions found in every
109. • KINSHIP
•The most basic bonds are
those based on marriage and
reproduction. Kinship refers to
these bonds, and all other
relationships resulting from
them.
119. 5. BILATERAL DESCENT
•some societies trace their descent through
the study of both parents ancestors. In a
biliteral descent, kinship is traced through
both ancestral lines of the mother
and father.
120. 6. PATRILINEAL
•Descent is identified by tracing the
ancestry of an individual by his or her
relatives from the men, sons or
fathers of the families in the ancestry
line.
121. 7. MATRILINEAL
•Descent is identified by tracing the
affiliation of an individual by his or her
relatives from the women, daughters
or mothers of the families in the
ancestry line.
125. MARRIAGE
The union of a couple through legal and
socially acceptable means. Kinship by
is a union of two families where the family
and relatives from both sides are related by
affinity.
126. MARRIAGE
•It is a socio-sexual institution, a part of the
wider institutional complex of the family.
•It is the center of the kinship system.
127. AFFINAL KINSHIP
refers to type of relations developed
when marriage occurs. When
marriage takes place new forms of
social relations are developed. (in-
laws)
130. ENDOGAMY
The practice of marrying within a specific
ethnic group, class or social group, rejecting
others on such a basis as being unsuitable for
marriage or for the other close relationships.
131. EXOGAMOUS
The practice of marrying outside group, class
or social group, which is vey common in
modern societies.
Means of maintaining boundaries and creates
links.
132. MONOGAMY
The marriage of sexual partnering
practice where the individual has
only one male of female partner or
mate.
138. ACTIVITY: TRACE IT
DOWN!!!
Trace the kinship by blood and
marriage of your own family
(PATRILINEAL OR MATRILINEAL).
Use the sample format and give
the complete name/information
of each member of the family.
139. CECILIA & PEDRO SERQUINA
EDITHA & ODYOK
ADERES AMALIA
SERQUINA
PORFIRIO
ORTIZ
SERQMY KINSHIP & FAMILY
PETER SERQUINA
MARK JEREMY MARA JOELA
DAIRA LEEDANICA LYRADIANE LIZ
DIANE LIZ
140. ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS:
1.WHAT TYPE OF FAMILY DO
YOU THINK MOST OF THE
FILIPINO HAS? WHY?
2.HOW IMPORTANT IS MARRIAGE TO
YOU?
3.WHAT IS YOUR IDEA OF A
MARRIED PERSON?
141. ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS:
4. HOW WOULD YOU CATEGORIZE
YOUR FAMILY?WHY?
5. IF YOU BELONG TO A FAMILY THAT
HAS A BAD REPUTATION IN THE
PAST,HOW WOULD YOU PROCEED TO
LIVE BY IT IN THE PRESENT?
Notes de l'éditeur
1. Trace kinship ties and ties and social networks;
2. Describe the organized nature of social life and rules governing behaviour;
3. Compare different social norms of social organization according to their manifest and latent functions;
4.Analyze social and political structure.
The unifying factor could be that two people are in love, or simply they want to care for each other.
kinship based on blood is considered as the most basic and general form of relations.
refers to a biological relationship. Societies recognize that children descend from parents and that there exists a
is a system of determining descent groups in which one belongs to one's father's or mother's line, whereby one's descent is traced either exclusively through male ancestors (patriline), or exclusively through female ancestors (matriline).
is a system of determining descent groups in which one belongs to one's father's or mother's line, whereby one's descent is traced either exclusively through male ancestors (patriline), or exclusively through female ancestors (matriline).
is a system of determining descent groups in which one belongs to one's father's or mother's line, whereby one's descent is traced either exclusively through male ancestors (patriline), or exclusively through female ancestors (matriline).
is a system of determining descent groups in which one belongs to one's father's or mother's line, whereby one's descent is traced either exclusively through male ancestors (patriline), or exclusively through female ancestors (matriline).
is a system of determining descent groups in which one belongs to one's father's or mother's line, whereby one's descent is traced either exclusively through male ancestors (patriline), or exclusively through female ancestors (matriline).