Tag the questions with any skills you have. Your dashboard will track each student's mastery of each skill.
Give this quiz to my class
Q 1/70
Score 0
An attitude or policy that encourages childbearing
30
Pro-Natalist
Q 2/70
Score 0
A government policy concerned with limiting population growth.
30
Anti-Natalist
70 questions
Q.
An attitude or policy that encourages childbearing
1
30 sec
Q.
A government policy concerned with limiting population growth.
2
30 sec
Q.
ethnic & national pride; anti-immigration; financial support via free subsidized child care, paid maternity leave, free educational opportunities; tax breaks for children, housing subsidies, free health care, etc.
3
30 sec
Q.
propaganda of economic fears, encourage later marriages, acceptance of girls; fines and taxes per child, family planning education (contraceptives, legalization of abortion, sterilization campaigns)
4
30 sec
Q.
the permanent or semipermanent relocation of people from one place to another
5
30 sec
Q.
Migration into a new location
6
30 sec
Q.
movement of individuals out of an area
7
30 sec
Q.
a factor that causes people to leave their homelands and migrate to another region.
8
30 sec
Q.
A factor that draws or attracts people to another location.
9
30 sec
Q.
job loss, lack of employment opportunities, low wages
10
30 sec
Q.
job opportunities, higher wages, seasonal jobs
11
30 sec
Q.
freedoms, lack of discrimination, prejudice, persecution, racism; familial or kinship ties
12
30 sec
Q.
Discrimination, prejudice, persecution, and racism due to gender, ethnicity, and/or religion.
people relocate due to fears of violence or survival
19
30 sec
Q.
voluntary migration from one country to another; retain strong emotional and financial ties to their country of origin
20
30 sec
Q.
Money migrants send back to family and friends in their home countries, often in cash, forming an important part of the economy in many poorer countries
21
30 sec
Q.
Traditional migration of nomadic herders that move their livestock from high elevations in the summer and lower elevations in the winter.
22
30 sec
Q.
voluntary migration within a country's borders
23
30 sec
Q.
the further apart two places are, the less likely it is that people will migrate between those places
24
30 sec
Q.
Internal migration from northern industrial cities to southern and western locales (1980s to present)
25
30 sec
Q.
voluntary migration; immigrants migrate to a location based off of the recommendation of family members, friends who have previously migrated to that location.
26
30 sec
Q.
Voluntary migration that follows a path of a series of stages towards a final destination
27
30 sec
Q.
Most typical kind of migration trend, up to 55% of people live in urban areas today.
28
30 sec
Q.
Migrants who travel internationally in order to find work as temporary laborers - typically a short period of time because the jobs cannot be filled by a country's own labor force.
29
30 sec
Q.
People who are forced to migrate from their home country and cannot return for fear of persecution, war or violence
30
30 sec
Q.
someone who is forced to flee his or her home but who remains within his or her country's borders
31
30 sec
Q.
Someone who has migrated to another country in the hope of being recognized as a refugee
32
30 sec
Q.
Historical: Atlantic Slave Trade
33
30 sec
Q.
See image
34
30 sec
Q.
See image
35
30 sec
Q.
See image
36
30 sec
Q.
See image
37
30 sec
Q.
main type of countries whose population increase is reliant on immigration
38
30 sec
Q.
main type of countries whose people immigrate
39
30 sec
Q.
a fear or hatred of foreigners or strangers
40
30 sec
Q.
the geographic origin of a culture or cultural trait.
41
30 sec
Q.
Mesoamerica, Andean America, West Africa, Nile River Valley, Mesopotamia, Indus River Valley, Ganges River Valley, Wei/Huang Rivers
42
30 sec
Q.
London, New York, Paris, Shanghai
43
30 sec
Q.
The spread of a cultural trait through the migration of people.
44
30 sec
Q.
the spread of cultural trait through the interaction between people; examples include: contagious diffusion, hierarchical diffusion, and stimulus diffusion
45
30 sec
Q.
the movement or spread of cultural traits, knowledge, ideas, trends from hearths to other geographical areas. Two types: expansion and relocation
46
30 sec
Q.
The rapid, widespread diffusion of a feature or trend throughout a population. Ex: internet/viral videos instantly promote trends
47
30 sec
Q.
The spread of cultural traits from the most interconnected, powerful, wealthy people/organizations down to others. Ex: cell phones used to be only owned by the wealthy
48
30 sec
Q.
is the spread of something from lower class/less populated areas to higher class/more populated cultural centers. Ex: hip hop started in urban cities among poverty & discrimination and today it is mainstream.
49
30 sec
Q.
As cultural traits spread they are altered/modified due to a cultural barrier, taboo, or difference. Ex: McDonald's in India altered menu to veggie burgers
50
30 sec
Q.
A policy of extending a country's power and influence through diplomacy or military force.
51
30 sec
Q.
When a powerful country establishes settlements in a less powerful country for economic and/or political gain.
52
30 sec
Q.
A new form of global power relationships that involves not direct political control but economic exploitation by multinational corporations
53
30 sec
Q.
An extremely simplified, limited non-native language used by two people that speak two different languages.
54
30 sec
Q.
A pidgin language that develops into a new combined language with native speakers. Frequently developed through settings of colonization or slavery.
55
30 sec
Q.
a common language used by speakers of two different languages for communication. Usually for business, trade, commerce or in popular culture.
56
30 sec
Q.
variations in accent, grammar usage and spelling and develop out of geographic distance or isolation. Ex: British English vs. American English - flip/flops vs. thongs
57
30 sec
Q.
The language adopted for use by the government for the conduct of business and publication of documents.
58
30 sec
Q.
creates unity; efficient; aids in communication; cheaper costs (only print 1 language)
59
30 sec
Q.
language of powerful majority and/or former colonial power; marginalizes/isolates or endangers other languages and cultures
60
30 sec
Q.
As a cultural trait diffuses, the people who adopt it might alter it. Things change over distance and time.
61
30 sec
Q.
The diminishing in importance and eventual disappearance of a phenomenon with increasing distance from its origin.
62
30 sec
Q.
the trend towards increase cultural and economic connectedness between people, businesses & organizations throughout the world without regard to borders or barriers
63
30 sec
Q.
The shrinking of the world due to improvements in communication and transportation technologies
64
30 sec
Q.
The tendency for cultures to become more alike as they increasingly share technology and organizational structures in a modern world - language, world sports, McDonald's, etc.
65
30 sec
Q.
Cultures become LESS alike due to both cultural and physical barriers. The process of a culture restricting contact with other cultures in an attempt to retain its originality. Ex: Amish
66
30 sec
Q.
when people within one culture adopt some traits from another culture
67
30 sec
Q.
one culture abandons their original culture and adopts another culture
68
30 sec
Q.
the acceptance and tolerance of many different cultures which exist in close proximity to one another
69
30 sec
Q.
when two cultural traits blend together and form a new trait. Example: Haitian voodoo (a combination of Roman Catholicism and West African spiritual traditions)