AP French — Unité 1 : Les familles dans différentes sociétés (structures et valeurs)

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25 Terms

1
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Family structure

How a household is composed and functions (who lives together, how decisions are made, and how kinship is defined).

2
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Nuclear family

A family unit consisting of parents and their children living together.

3
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Extended family

A family network that includes relatives beyond parents and children (e.g., grandparents, aunts/uncles, cousins), sometimes living together or strongly involved.

4
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Single-parent family

A family in which one parent assumes most day-to-day responsibilities.

5
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Blended family (stepfamily)

A new family configuration after separation/divorce that may include stepparents and half-/stepsiblings.

6
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Adoptive family

A family formed through adoption, where belonging is built through a long-term educational and emotional commitment.

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Foster family

A family that temporarily cares for a child, providing stability and support even if the legal ties differ from adoption.

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Family role

The set of explicit or implicit expectations tied to someone’s position in the family (child, parent, older sibling, etc.), negotiated in everyday life.

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Parental authority

Parents’ power to set rules and make decisions, which can vary in style (more negotiated vs more top-down).

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Negotiated authority style

A rule-setting approach that emphasizes discussion, explanation, and compromise between parents and children.

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Vertical (top-down) authority style

A rule-setting approach where parents make the final decision with less negotiation.

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Autonomy (for adolescents)

The degree of independence a teenager is granted, often increasing with demonstrated responsibility and trust.

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Household chores

Routine tasks at home (e.g., dishes, cleaning, taking out trash, babysitting, grocery shopping) that reflect values like fairness and cooperation.

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Division of labor in the home

How chores are distributed, often influenced by age, available time, family traditions, and sometimes gender expectations.

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Sibling relationship (ambivalence)

The idea that relationships between brothers and sisters can include both closeness and rivalry at the same time.

16
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Reconciliation

Restoring a good relationship after a conflict or argument (e.g., siblings making up after fighting).

17
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Obligation language

Grammar and phrasing used to express necessity and duties (e.g., “it is necessary to,” “must,” “need to”).

18
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Permission and prohibition

Ways to express what someone is allowed or not allowed to do (e.g., “have the right to,” “forbid,” “ban”).

19
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Cultural comparison (without stereotypes)

Comparing practices across cultures by citing a trend from a source and adding nuance (e.g., it depends on families, regions, or socioeconomic context).

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Customs and traditions

Repeated family practices that give meaning to life, mark time, strengthen belonging, and transmit values.

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Ceremony

A more formal event (religious or civil) such as a wedding that makes family bonds visible and socially recognized.

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Ritual

A repeated action (meal, visit, gift, speech) that gains meaning through shared participation and symbolism.

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Cultural transmission

The passing of values, language, stories, and practices from one generation to the next—intentionally taught or implicitly modeled.

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Social pressure around traditions

Stress created when family expectations (attendance, dress codes, costs, roles) feel obligatory or unequal for some members.

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Generational differences

Gaps in viewpoints between teens, parents, and grandparents shaped by different life experiences, historical contexts, and family responsibilities.

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