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socialization
(redirected from Agents of Socialization)

   Also found in: Medical, Wikipedia 0.09 sec.

socialization

Process, beginning in childhood, by which a person becomes a member of a society, learning its norms, customs, laws, and ways of living. The main agents of socialization are the family, school, peer groups, work, religion, and the mass media. The main methods of socialization are direct instruction, rewards and punishment, imitation, experimentation, role play, and interaction.

Some agents of socialization, such as the family and the peer group, may conflict with each other, offering alternative goals, values, and styles of behaviour. Socialization is of particular interest to psychologists, anthropologists, and sociologists, but there are diverse opinions about its methods and effects.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
In relation to adolescents, Borow (1984) described social influences such as family, peers, and school as the principal agents of socialization.
These works stress the strategies and interests of agents of socialization in the West, especially the United States.
In her book Telling Tales, Dianne Johnson points out that generally children's books are used "as agents of socialization, politicization, and of formal education" (1).
 
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