Matter, Matter Everywhere

Matter, Matter Everywhere
Title Matter, Matter Everywhere PDF eBook
Author Stephen M. Tomecek
Publisher
Total Pages 24
Release 2003
Genre Research
ISBN 9780731239146

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Matter Is Everywhere

Matter Is Everywhere
Title Matter Is Everywhere PDF eBook
Author Rebecca Matos
Publisher Benchmark Education Company
Total Pages 36
Release 2005
Genre Matter
ISBN 1410846105

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Read about the types of matter that can be seen and felt.

Matter, Matter Everywhere

Matter, Matter Everywhere
Title Matter, Matter Everywhere PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages
Release 2005
Genre Matter
ISBN

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Reading Expeditions (Science: Physical Science): Matter, Matter Everywhere

Reading Expeditions (Science: Physical Science): Matter, Matter Everywhere
Title Reading Expeditions (Science: Physical Science): Matter, Matter Everywhere PDF eBook
Author National Geographic Learning
Publisher National Geographic Society
Total Pages 0
Release 2007-01-25
Genre Content area reading
ISBN 9780792288800

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Introduces matter, including states of matter, how matter is measured, and how atoms are arranged.

Matter, Matter Everywhere

Matter, Matter Everywhere
Title Matter, Matter Everywhere PDF eBook
Author Cross, Gary
Publisher Markham, Ont. : Scholastic Canada
Total Pages 92
Release 2000
Genre Matter
ISBN 9781552689011

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Status

Status
Title Status PDF eBook
Author Cecilia L. Ridgeway
Publisher Russell Sage Foundation
Total Pages 215
Release 2019-11-22
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1610448898

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Status is ubiquitous in modern life, yet our understanding of its role as a driver of inequality is limited. In Status, sociologist and social psychologist Cecilia Ridgeway examines how this ancient and universal form of inequality influences today’s ostensibly meritocratic institutions and why it matters. Ridgeway illuminates the complex ways in which status affects human interactions as we work together towards common goals, such as in classroom discussions, family decisions, or workplace deliberations. Ridgeway’s research on status has important implications for our understanding of social inequality. Distinct from power or wealth, status is prized because it provides affirmation from others and affords access to valuable resources. Ridgeway demonstrates how the conferral of status inevitably contributes to differing life outcomes for individuals, with impacts on pay, wealth creation, and health and wellbeing. Status beliefs are widely held views about who is better in society than others in terms of esteem, wealth, or competence. These beliefs confer advantages which can exacerbate social inequality. Ridgeway notes that status advantages based on race, gender, and class—such as the belief that white men are more competent than others—are the most likely to increase inequality by facilitating greater social and economic opportunities. Ridgeway argues that status beliefs greatly enhance higher status groups’ ability to maintain their advantages in resources and access to positions of power and make lower status groups less likely to challenge the status quo. Many lower status people will accept their lower status when given a baseline level of dignity and respect—being seen, for example, as poor but hardworking. She also shows that people remain willfully blind to status beliefs and their effects because recognizing them can lead to emotional discomfort. Acknowledging the insidious role of status in our lives would require many higher-status individuals to accept that they may not have succeeded based on their own merit; many lower-status individuals would have to acknowledge that they may have been discriminated against. Ridgeway suggests that inequality need not be an inevitable consequence of our status beliefs. She shows how status beliefs can be subverted—as when we reject the idea that all racial and gender traits are fixed at birth, thus refuting the idea that women and people of color are less competent than their male and white counterparts. This important new book demonstrates the pervasive influence of status on social inequality and suggests ways to ensure that it has a less detrimental impact on our lives.

McGraw-Hill Science

McGraw-Hill Science
Title McGraw-Hill Science PDF eBook
Author Richard Moyer
Publisher
Total Pages 80
Release 2000
Genre Matter
ISBN 9780022777357

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