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KS3 Sociology

Family and relationships

50 questions5 subtopics
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What's covered

Different family types10
Growing up and the life course10
How families have changed10
Roles in the home10
What families are for10

Key facts

1

A blended (reconstituted) family is formed when two separate families join together, often creating step-parents and step-siblings.

2

Adolescence is the stage of growing up between childhood and adulthood, often called the teenage years.

3

Family types in the UK have become much more varied over the last hundred years.

4

Looking after children is a form of unpaid work that takes time and effort, even though no one is paid for it.

5

One job of a family is to care for members by giving food, shelter, clothing and safety.

6

There is no single "normal" family type; many different family shapes are common and accepted in the UK today.

7

The main agents of socialisation are the family, school, friends (peers) and the media.

8

The 1969 Divorce Reform Act made divorce easier in England and Wales, which led to more single-parent and step-families.

9

Children and young people can also have roles at home, such as tidying their room or helping with chores.

10

Families give emotional support: love, comfort and a sense of belonging.

Sample questions

A taste of the 50 questions in this topic, answers marked. Sign up to practise the full set with spaced repetition.

1Different family types

Which family type is two parents living with their children in one home?

  • A foster family
  • A nuclear family
  • A single-parent family
  • An extended family
2Growing up and the life course

Which of these are the main stages of the life course?

  • Baby, toddler, pupil and worker
  • Childhood, adolescence, adulthood and old age
  • Morning, midday, evening and night
  • Nursery, primary, secondary and college
3How families have changed

What is a family with two parents living with their own children called?

  • A lone-parent family
  • A nuclear family
  • A single-person household
  • An extended family
4Roles in the home

What does the division of labour in the home mean?

  • How a family decides where they want to live
  • How household jobs are shared out in a family
  • How many people are allowed to live in one home
  • How much money a family earns from working jobs
5What families are for

Which of these is one of the main jobs a family does?

  • Caring for members and meeting their basic needs
  • Deciding which subjects schools teach
  • Running the local hospital and police
  • Setting national laws for the whole country
6Different family types

Which family includes grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins as well as parents?

  • A blended family
  • A childless couple
  • A nuclear family
  • An extended family

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