Role Theory: Perspectives for Health ProfessionalsAppleton-Century-Crofts, 1978 - 354 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 31
... viewed as an active or passive agent in his own socialization . Those investigators who advocate the position that the socializee is a passive recipient of cultural norms and contents assume that the effect of socializers is ...
... viewed as an active or passive agent in his own socialization . Those investigators who advocate the position that the socializee is a passive recipient of cultural norms and contents assume that the effect of socializers is ...
Page 32
... viewed both from the perspective of the individual being socialized and from that of the society . From the in ... viewed more and more as an interactional process in which the socializer and socializee are mutually influenced . Viewed ...
... viewed both from the perspective of the individual being socialized and from that of the society . From the in ... viewed more and more as an interactional process in which the socializer and socializee are mutually influenced . Viewed ...
Page 58
... viewed as successful if it prepares individuals to respond to a variety of situational demands with the appropriate ... viewed as unsuccessful if an individual has a consistency of behavioral response in face of variations in his ...
... viewed as successful if it prepares individuals to respond to a variety of situational demands with the appropriate ... viewed as unsuccessful if an individual has a consistency of behavioral response in face of variations in his ...
Contents
Theoretical Approaches to the Study of Roles | 17 |
17 | 37 |
4 | 59 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
associated bargaining Becker Brim clients clinical concept cultural defined disciplines effects Elkin and Handel empirical ethnocentric example experience factors function goals Goslin Health Belief Model health care health education health professionals health professions health related behavior health science centers Heiss hospital identified individual individual's influence interaction interprofessional Kerckhoff knowledge learning Leininger level of measurement magnitude estimation measurement medicine ment motivation norms nurse leader organization outcomes overqualification patients pattern percent persons perspective physicians position practice practitioners primary primary care problems programs Queen Bee syndrome Rand McNally reference group relationship responses role attitudes role behaviors role conflict role demands role expectations role occupant role performance role prescriptions role strain role stress role theory role-taking scale sick role significant situations skills social stimuli social structure socialization process socializee society specific status stratification techniques theoretical tion U.S. Census Bureau values variables workers York