Sociology Quiz
Why people behave differently in groups than alone.
What you'll learn
Sociology is the study of how people behave when they are part of groups, not just individuals. This quiz covers classical theorists, social institutions, class, race, gender, deviance, networks, and the macro forces (economic, technological, cultural) that shape our daily decisions in ways we rarely notice. The frame that explains why offices, families, and entire countries all run on similar invisible rules.
A sample of what's inside
- What is the 'sociological imagination', as defined by C. Wright Mills?
- What is 'social stratification' and what are the main historical forms it has taken?
- What are Marx's two main social classes under capitalism and what is the fundamental conflict between them?
- What are Max Weber's three dimensions of social stratification, and how do they differ from Marx's single class-based model?
- What did Émile Durkheim mean by 'social facts' and why were they methodologically significant?
- What were the four types of suicide Durkheim identified, and what did his study demonstrate about suicide as a social phenomenon?
How a round works
A round is ten multiple-choice questions. Pick a game mode: Endless (no timer), Sprint (60 seconds for the whole round), or Random (10 questions mixed across all subjects). Pick A, B, C, or D, or use your keyboard (1-4 or A-D, then Enter to advance). Every answer reveals a one-sentence fact you can take with you. At the end of a round you see your score, accuracy, best streak, a question-by-question breakdown, and a shareable result you can copy or post.
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