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Test Bank for Canadian Families Today, 4e by Patrizia Albanese||ISBN:9780199039678

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Test Bank for Canadian Families Today, 4e by Patrizia Albanese||ISBN:9780199039678

Institution
Canadian Families Today
Course
Canadian Families Today

Content preview

Test Bank for Canadian Families Today, 4e by Patrizia
Albanese
(All Chapter Answer at the end of each Chapter)
Chapter 1
Introduction to Diversity in Canada’s Families: Variations in Forms,
Definitions, and Theories
Multiple Choice Questions
1. On August 23, 2016, about 200 Indigenous people gathered in Toronto to protest the
, a period in the 1960s and 1970s during which Indigenous children were removed
M
from their families and place “in the care” of non-Indigenous families.
a) double decade revelation
b) Sixties Exposé
ED
c) Sixties Scoop
d) Sixties Sensation
e) decade of injustice

2. The following statements regarding the 2016 Census is false: .
a) Married couples remained the dominant family form, however this number has been
ST
declining over time in relation to other family forms.
b) There were over 72,880 same-sex couples in Canada, representing 0.9 per cent of all couples.
c) There were proportionally fewer households than in the past composed of a mother, father,
and children, with more people living alone, as couples without children, or as multi-
generational families.
U
d) 10 per cent of the Canadian population reported living alone.
e) About 12 per cent of all same-sex couples had children living with them.

3. Blended families are also known as .
D
a) mixed families
b) stepfamilies
c) reformulated families
Y
d) remodelled families
e) millennial families

4. According to Maclean’s magazine, Canada is leading the pack in .
a) same-sex families
b) stepfamilies
c) traditional nuclear families
d) mixed unions

5. are not an example of a transnational or multi-local family.
a) Visa students



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, b) Immigrant families
c) Migrant workers
d) Adopted children
e) Refugee claimants

6. Thousands of people living in Canada currently find themselves temporarily separated from their
children and spouses as part of a strategy to secure a better economic future and opportunities
for their family. Families who find themselves in this position are called .
a) dependent families
b) settlement families
c) refugees
d) conditional Canadians
e) satellite families

7. The term “satellite children” was first used in the 1980s to describe children whose
M
parents were immigrants to North America.
a) Japanese
b) Chinese
c) Italian
ED
d) British
e) African

8. Many racialized immigrants in Canada live in poverty because of .
a) racial discrimination in employment
b) an over-representation of racialized groups in low-paying jobs
ST
c) a labour market failure to recognize international credentials
d) a and c
e) All of the above

9. “Child launch” from families refers to the point at which children leave their parental home.
U
This “launch” has been delayed due to changing economic circumstances and .
a) children staying to assist aging parents
b) children marrying at an older age
D
c) larger school debt loans
d) higher rents
e) None of the above
Y

10. The term “ ” refers to young adults who leave their parental homes for work or school,
only to return due to large debt loads, shifting employment prospects, or changing marital
statuses.
a) velcro kids
b) rebounding kids
c) ricochet kids
d) bouncing-back babies
e) comeback kids

11. All of the following, except for , are familiar with living in multi-generational
households and pooling family resources.



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, a) divorced Canadians
b) older Canadians
c) Canadians with disabilities
d) new immigrants to Canada
e) large families

12. The term “nuclear families” refers to .
a) families who have been through the divorce process
b) newly arrived immigrant families
c) extended family members
d) a couple and their children living in the same household
e) those who live common-law

13. In relationships, “resource differentials” can produce “ ,” which can result in
exploitation in the marital relationship.
M
a) a relationship of exchange
b) a negative home environment
c) relationship asymmetry
d) resource imbalance
ED
e) a reverse power structure

14. A bi-nuclear family is defined as .
a) a couple, their children, and their stepchildren
b) divorced parents with children moving between and living in separate households
c) two nuclear families living in a common household
ST
d) a same-sex couple with either biological or adopted children
e) a couple or a single parent living with children

15. The term “ ” family is defined as a household that is shared by several generations or
sets of kin.
U
a) extended
b) nuclear
c) long-term
D
d) elongated
e) protracted
Y
16. Due to dire economic circumstances, Sarah, her mother and father, invited her grandparents,
two aunts, a second-cousin, and a great-grandparent to come and live with them. These
family members planned to stay until they could afford to live on their own.
a) extended
b) peripheral
c) outlying
d) secondary
e) ancillary

17. A “ ” consists of related or unrelated individuals who share a dwelling.
a) domicile
b) abode



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, c) household
d) residence
e) domestic quarter

18. The Vanier Institute of the Family (2012) suggests that the definition of “family” incorporates all
of the following except .
a) the maintenance and care of group members
b) the addition of new members through procreation or adoption
c) the socialization of children
d) the social control of members
e) members living together and all connected through blood ties

19. Eichler (2005) suggests that the definition of “family” should move beyond who makes a family
to makes a family.
a) why
M
b) how
c) what
d) where
e) when
ED

20. George Murdock concluded that the nuclear family was universal and served four basic
functions: .
a) reproductive, sociable, habitual, and economic
b) stabilizing, reproductive, sexual, and educational
c) educational, habitual, sexual, and stabilizing
ST
d) reproductive, sexual, sociable, and habitual
e) sexual, economic, reproductive, and educational

21. identified cross-cultural variations and stressed that labour divisions are learned
behaviours.
U
a) George Murdock
b) Talcott Parsons
c) Margaret Mead
D
d) Karl Marx
e) Stephanie Coontz
Y
22. Functionalism is based on the idea that families are .
a) systems of interaction
b) flexible units that change over time
c) institutions that serve specific functions in society
d) the “doers” of social life
e) designed to fulfill the goals of capitalism

23. According to Parsons (1955), men are biologically better suited to fulfill (i.e. tasks that
need to be performed to ensure a family’s physical survival) while women are better suited to
performing (i.e. tasks involved in emotional or supportive functions).
a) instrumental functions; expressive functions
b) labouring functions; domestic functions



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Institution
Canadian Families Today
Course
Canadian Families Today

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