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TEST BANK
Aging and Society A Canadian Perspectives 8th Edition
by Mark Novak, Herbert C. Northcott, Karen Kobayashi All Chapters 1 - 20
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Table of Contents
•
Chapter 1: Aging Today
•
Chapter 2: Theories and Methods
•
Chapter 3: Population Aging
•
Chapter 4: Aging and Ethnicity
•
Chapter 5: Personal Health and Wellness
•
Chapter 6: The Psychology of Aging
•
Chapter 7: Healthcare
•
Chapter 8: Finances and Economics
•
Chapter 9: Retirement and Work
•
Chapter 10: Leisure, Recreation, and Service
•
Chapter 11: Housing and Transportation
•
Chapter 12: Family Life
•
Chapter 13: Social Support and Caregiving
•
Chapter 14: Dying, Death, and Bereavement
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CHAPTER 1: AGING TODAY
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. Which of the following is given in the text as a reason for studying aging?
a. to help oneself live the best old age possible
b. to enable people to avoid or reverse the effects of aging
c. to enable people to make old age as inexpensive a time of life as it can be
d. to learn how to work with elderly clients
ANSWER: D
REF: 2-3
BLM: REM
2. As of 2011, what percentage of the population comprised older Canadians?a.
16.0%
b. 15%
c. 9.1%
d. 6.8%
ANSWER: B
REF: 2
BLM: REM
3. By 2036, approximately what percentage of the population will comprise older Canadians as predicted by
Statistics Canada?
a. 9%
b. 19%
c. 25%
d. 34%
ANSWER: C
REF: 2
BLM: REM
4. As society ages, what will change in the Canadian social structure?
a. Poverty will increase as more people enter old age.
b. The government will face economic crisis as pension costs rise.
c. The mass media will promote ageism.
d. The healthcare system will add programs to prevent illness before it occurs.
ANSWER: D
REF: 2
BLM: HO
5. Which of the following is an example of a social structure?
a. the education system
b. the aging process
c. the government
d. the police
ANSWER: A
REF: 2
BLM: HO
6. What effect does an aging society have on the Canadian family?
a. an increase in the number of people living in three- and four-generation families
b. a decrease in the number of people who become grandparents during their lifetime
c. an erosion of values as extended family structures fragment
d. an increase in financial responsibility placed on elder family members
ANSWER: A
REF: 2
BLM: HO
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7. How will the healthcare system have to adapt as Canadian society ages?
a. by decreasing the attention given to chronic ailments such as diabetes and arthritis
b. by favouring the treatment of more acute illnesses
c. by changing public opinion about old age
d. by trying to prevent illness before it happens
ANSWER: D
REF: 2
BLM: HO
8. Dr. Clarke is conducting a research experiment that is studying the process of aging among older
Canadians. What is the name for this social science?
a. tautology
b. ageism
c. gerontology
d. aeonology
ANSWER: C
REF: 2
BLM: HO
9. What are the two points of view that gerontologists use to study aging?
a. economics and social structures
b. the family and the education system
c. bioethics and economics
d. the individual and society
ANSWER: D
REF: 2
BLM: REM
10. What did Unwin and colleagues’ (2008) research find out about perceptions of aging?
a. People know little about aging.
b. Old age is seen as a time of weakness and death.
c. Some attitudes towards the elderly have possibly worsened.
d. Most people’s knowledge about older people is based on myth or fear.
ANSWER: C
REF:
3
BLM: REM
11. Your uncle Ken has just retired from the workforce, and he needs to find an activity that will keep him in
touch with his community. According to recent research found in your textbook, which of the following
activities would be a beneficial activity for your uncle?
a. reading books to his grandchildren
b. baking cookies
c. working in his woodshop
d. playing cards at a local library
ANSWER: D
REF: 4
BLM: HO
12. Which of the following accurately describes stereotypes?
a. They prevent discrimination and ageism.
b. They force people to confront the truth about the elderly.
c. They often have some basis in reality.
d. They exaggerate and distort the bad, while ignoring the good qualities of a group of
people.
ANSWER: C
REF: 5
BLM: HO
13. Which of the following presents a negative stereotype of aging?
a. an elderly 84 year-old gentleman who plays with his grandchildren
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b. a 95-year-old woman who drives erratically
c. a 76 year-old male who lives in a nursing home but has an alert memory
d. an 82-year-old female who learns to do yoga at her recreational centre
ANSWER: B
REF: 5
BLM: HO
14. While playing shuffleboard at the local seniors club, Mr. Jones jokes about Mr. Smith’s poor eyesight afterMr.
Smith misses the scoring area. Mr. Jones’ derogatory comment is an example of which type of insult?
a. the old goat curse
b. the black sheep effect
c. elderspeak
d. ageism
ANSWER: B
REF: 6
BLM: HO
15. What do gerontologists call prejudice against older people?
a. a negative stereotype
b. geriatrics
c. age dichotomy syndrome
d. ageism
ANSWER: D
REF: 6-7
BLM: REM
16. Which of the following describes ageism in our culture?
a. It is acquired from experience with the aged.
b. It is a social component of the biological process.
c. It is learned from a variety of sources.
d. It is useful for maintaining cultural diversity.
ANSWER: C
REF: 8-9
BLM: HO
17. Researchers including Henneberg, Gilbert, and Ricketts (2010, 2008) have studied the treatment of older
people in literature. What have these studies found?
a. Overall, positive views of older people predominate.
b. Negative traits in literature outnumber those in philosophy by two to one.
c. Older people are stereotyped and children then hold negative views about them.
d. Mysteries often portray older people as devious or manipulative.
ANSWER: C
REF: 8-9
BLM: REM
18. Sally has been researching mass media and the portrayal of older Canadians in the media. Her studies have
generally shown that the mass media (such as television and the newspapers) tend to create whichtype of
common image of older people?
a. positive
b. negative
c. neutral
d. colourful
ANSWER: B
REF: 8-9
BLM: HO
19. What did Palmore’s study of contemporary jokes find?
a. that the elderly are always portrayed in a positive light
b. that the elderly are never referred to jokingly
c. that the elderly are stereotyped as impotent or unattractive
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d. that the elderly are often background characters
ANSWER: C
REF: 10
BLM: REM
20. What is true of most humour connected to aging?
a. It has a negative view of aging.
b. It glosses over the real problems of aging in modern society.
c. It has a neutral outlook on the aged.
d. It actually reflects real problems that the aged face.
ANSWER: A
REF: 10
BLM: HO
21. What did George (2006) find in a review of the literature on life satisfaction in old age?
a. Life satisfaction in old age increased.
b. Life satisfaction in old age decreased.
c. Life satisfaction in old age did not change.
d. Life satisfaction in old age remains high.
ANSWER: D
REF: 10
BLM: REM
22. What did Cooke find in the observation of older workers?
a. Most older workers did their work poorly.
b. Employers valued experience over strength.
c. Employers valued strong, young workers.
d. Employers try to force older workers to retire early.
ANSWER: D
REF: 10
BLM: REM
23. According to the AARP study, what is the largest barrier for those aged 50 years and older when it comesto
finding a job?
a. age discrimination
b. health status
c. lack of skills
d. higher absenteeism rates
ANSWER: A
REF: 10
BLM: REM
24. You are 49 years old and you were rejected for a job. You later find out that someone 10 years younger
than you received the job because the employer thought that someone younger than you “would be
more suitable to handle the rapid pace of the job environment.” What term is used to describe the
excuse as to why an older person is rejected for a job?
a. partiality
b. bias
c. euphemism
d. favouritism
ANSWER: C
REF: 11
BLM: HO
25. What does the research on sociological aging show about older people?
a. Older people feel dissatisfied with life.
b. Older people live rich lives that contradict stereotypes.
c. Older people live a poor quality of life.
d. Older people view aging as a decline in lifestyle.
ANSWER: B
REF: 11
BLM: REM
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26. Which of the following terms does Toni Calasanti believe contains a more subtle form of ageism?
a. aged
b. elderly
c. senior
d. older
ANSWER: D
REF: 12-13
BLM: REM
27. According to research by Baker and Gringart (2009), what method do older men use to deal with
aging?
a. They go on dates.
b. They isolate themselves.
c. They engage in physical fitness.
d. They have cosmetic surgery.
ANSWER: C
28.
REF: 13
BLM: REM
According to Rozanova (2006), what do ageism and “positive aging” both promote?
a. intergenerational equity
b. ageing as a worthwhile goal
c. a stereotyped, one-dimensional view of later life
d. a balanced view of later life
ANSWER: C
REF: 13
BLM: REM
29. Your grandmother Lilley still loves to jog, to bake pies, to travel the world, and to babysit her
grandchildren. Although she is 86 years old, she still possesses a vim and vigour for life, and she
vehemently denies that she is aging. What term does Catherine Mayer use to describe someone like
your grandmother Lilley?
a. immoral
b. amortal
c. immature
d. amoral
ANSWER: B
REF: 13
BLM: HO
30. What leads to a more positive view of aging?
a. education
b. interaction
c. knowledge and satisfying contact
d. experience
ANSWER: C
REF: 15-16
BLM: HO
31. Samantha’s grandmother lives alone in a large city. She has arthritis and struggles with meal preparation and
mobility issues around the city. Samantha notices that many older people are in similar situationsas the
Canadian population ages. Sam is experiencing a common fear that is reflected in ageism as theCanadian
population focuses on population aging. What is that fear?
a. a fear of an aging society
b. a concern for the elderly
c. a lack of trust in the elderly
d. a fear of old age
ANSWER: A
REF: 16
BLM: HO
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32. How is the older population stereotyped?
a. independent
b. productive
c. costly
d. generous
ANSWER: C
REF: 16-17
BLM: HO
33. What do changes in Canadian society suggest will happen to ageism in the future?
a. It will increase.
b. It will decrease.
c. It will remain the same.
d. It will cease to exist.
ANSWER: B
REF: 18
BLM: HO
SHORT-ANSWER QUESTIONS
1. The textbook discusses the fact that many older people “live rich and complex lives that contradict the
stereotypes.” Give examples of what this sentence actually means.
ANSWER:
Student answers should include the following:
• people aged 50–70 have good incomes
• people aged 50–70 have little or no mortgage
• people aged 50–70 have no children to support
• people aged 50–70 have money to spend
• people aged 50–70 have a better education
• people aged 50–70 have more active lifestyles
REF: 11
2. Helen is a worker in a retirement home. She uses elderspeak, and her clients do not like it when she
uses this type of speech with them. What is elderspeak? List examples of elderspeak, and then explain
the effects of elderspeak upon older individuals.
ANSWER:
Student answers should include the following:
“Elderspeak” is defined as a simplified speech like baby talk that some people use when they speak toolder
people. It stems from stereotyping older people as slow-witted.
This form of speech uses few clauses, shorter phrases, more filler phrases (e.g., “like,” “you know”),words
with fewer syllables, slower speech, and longer pauses. Elderspeak also includes the use of words like
“dearie,” “cutie,” and “sweetie.”
Elderspeak has a negative effect on the older person; it creates low self-esteem, it reduces a person’sability
to communicate effectively, it decreases the quality of interaction, and it reduces the older person’s sense of
control.
REF: 6
3. The textbook discusses several methods by which older adults can become victims of fraud. List and
briefly explain how older people can be victimized by fraud.
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ANSWER:
Student answers should include the following:
Older people run a higher risk of being victims of fraud. Fraud is the number one crime againstolder
Canadians (Federal/Provincial/Territorial Ministers 2010, 2).
Examples of fraud include the following:
1. Home repair con artists look for homes that need repairs, give a low estimate, and ask for
payment upfront, before any work gets done. Once the crook has the money, the work may never
get done or it is done poorly with cheap materials.
2. Slamming occurs when a person’s phone is switched to another provider without the owner’s
permission.
3. Cramming occurs when a person gets charged for phone services that he/she never ordered.
4. Money offers come from Nigerian sources in the form of emails. They promise to transfer large
amounts of money to a person’s bank account but later demand money for transfer fees and other
expenses.
5. Phishing targets older people with computers. The email will appear to come from a bank or a
major online business. The person is asked to click on a link to verify information, and the thieves’
computer then redirects the person to a fake site that collects the login and password, which gives
the thieves access to the person’s online account.
REF: 4-5
ESSAY QUESTIONS
1. What is ageism? What types of ageism do you think are present in today’s society? List and discussthree
examples of ageism.
ANSWER:
Student answers will vary, but should include the following:
Ageism is defined as prejudice against older people. It is “a socially constructed way of thinking about
older persons based on negative attitudes and stereotypes about aging and a tendency to structure society
based on an assumption that everyone is young ...” Ageism can come in many formsagainst older people.
Examples may include the following:
• Older people are weak, sick, and dying.
• People make fun of older people.
• Older people are mostly ignored or rejected in society.
• Older people are patronized or treated with less dignity.
• Older people are treated as though they have a physical limitation.
• Older people will be stereotyped in jokes, literature, and the media.
REF: Chapter 1
2. Imagine that you made yourself up to be a 75-year-old person, similar to what Paul Baker did inthe
textbook. What kinds of challenges or obstacles would you face in your community if you went out
to learn about society’s reactions to an older person? Discuss specific examples that
you may encounter in your community, and how you would deal with them.
ANSWER:
Student answers will vary, but should include the following:
• Very few people go out of their way to help older people.
• Some people ignore older people.
• People offer to placate, rather than help older people.
• Older people feel like a burden to society.
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•
•
•
•
Older people can become frustrated and angry.
Older people have to anticipate their every movement.
“the world gets bigger and faster for an old man.”
However, some communities engage older people, by the number of people that actually reside
there (Baker discusses the differences between Vancouver and old Victoria).
REF: 9
• There were also the examples in Chapter 1 found earlier in the text regarding Jessie Taylor,
found on pages 2 and 3.
3. Arrange an interview with your parents and/or your grandparents. Do they think they are
aging well? How do your parents and/or grandparents feel about growing older? What kinds
of challenges and obstacles do they face as they age?
ANSWER:
Student answers will vary, but should be related to concepts found within Chapter 1 of the text.REF:
Chapter 1
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CHAPTER 2: THEORIES AND METHODS
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. In 1980, the Gerontological Society surveyed 111 scholars to establish a core program for the field of
gerontology. Though the experts disagreed as to the content and boundaries of the field, which of the
following items did the scholars collectively believe?
a. Three areas of study should form the core of the curriculum.
b. The socioeconomic-environmental aspects of aging should be the main focus of courses at
the introductory level.
c. A consensus on the definition must be reached before gerontology can grow as a
discipline.
d. A comprehensive program would be difficult to construct because of problems in deciding
what aspects of aging are the most important.
ANSWER: A
REF: 22
BLM: REM
2. Which area of study in gerontology examines the physiological and health changes that occur as
people age?
a. physio-environmental studies
b. cohort medical studies
c. psycho-physiological studies
d. biomedical studies
ANSWER: D
REF: 22
BLM: REM
3. Which of the following would be an example of a psychosocial study in gerontology?
a. formal social supports
b. causes of dementia
c. relationships between individuals and groups
d. effects of healthcare systems
ANSWER: C
REF: 22
BLM: HO
4. George is conducting research about the effects of aging on the educational structure as well as the
effects of social structures on older people. Which area of gerontology is he studying?
a. psychosocial studies
b. socio-individual studies
c. multi-stage development social studies
d. socioeconomic-environmental studies
ANSWER: D
REF: 22
BLM: HO
5. Which areas of research are combined in the field of social gerontology?
a. socioeconomic-environmental, psychosocial, and practice-related research
b. biomedical and socioeconomic-environmental research
c. psychosocial, social policy, and social sciences research
d. biological, psychological, and health sciences research
ANSWER: A
REF: 22
BLM: REM
6. Which field looks at aging from the points of view of both the individual and the social system?
a. geriatrics
b. psychosocial studies
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c. social gerontology
d. didactic-senescence
ANSWER: C
REF: 22
BLM: REM
7. Why do social gerontologists examine the biological and physical changes that occur in old age?
a. to adapt the research obtained to their field of study
b. to study the relationship between biological aging and personal relationships
c. to see how the changes affect the individual or society as a whole
d. to establish a unified basis for the studies of biomedical, psycho-social, and
socioeconomic-environmental studies
ANSWER: C
REF: 23
BLM: HO
8. What do social gerontologists use to guide their research and interpret the results of studies?
a. statistics and demographics
b. test sampling
c. theories
d. focus groups
ANSWER: C
REF: 23
BLM: REM
9. How is a theory deemed to be a valuable tool for a researcher?
a. It gives concrete and final answers to questions.
b. It provides practical information for the development of social programs and interventions.
c. It provides essential trivial information about aging.
d. It explains all the facts about aging.
ANSWER: B
REF: 23
BLM: HO
10. According to the text, how does a researcher select a theory to use in order to explain a set of research
findings?
a. according to the researcher’s sense of how the world works
b. according to the original hypotheses of the study
c. according to recent academic trends
d. according to journal preferences and peer reviews
ANSWER: A
REF: 23
BLM: REM
11. Kayla is examining a theory that focuses on individuals and their interactions with one another, such asa
brief confrontation at a parents’ school meeting. Which of the following is Kayla studying?
a. micro-level
b. interpersonal
c. psychological
d. organic
ANSWER: A
REF: 23
BLM: HO
12. Which theories focus on social structure, social processes and problems, and their interrelationship?
a. macro-level theories
b. socio-political interactive theories
c. global perspectives
d. micro-level theories
ANSWER: A
REF: 23-24
BLM: REM
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13. Which of the following would be an example of a phenomenon explained by micro-level theories?
a. the effect of positive attitudes on older people
b. the effect of industrialization on older peoples’ social status
c. changes in memory with age
d. how gender and income affect older people’s well-being
ANSWER: C
REF: 23-24
BLM: HO
14. Which of the following is a criticism of micro-level theories?
a. They oversimplify social life.
b. They minimize the individual’s ability to act.
c. They emphasize what people do rather than the economic and social conditions that cause
them to act as they do.
d. They support a definition of old age as a time of decline.
ANSWER: C
REF: 24
BLM: HO
15. Which of the following is a criticism of the theories that examine aging in terms of the social
structures that influence behaviour?
a. that they are not well-supported by research
b. that they underestimate people’s ability to overcome the limits of social structures
c. that they focus too much on outcomes, and not enough on processes
d. that they focus too much on perceptions, and not enough on actions
ANSWER: B
REF: 24
BLM: HO
16. Which of the following methods assists social gerontologists to disentangle the effects of history,
biology, and the social life on the aging person?
a. theory
b. concept
c. evaluation
d. model
ANSWER: A
REF: 23-24
BLM: REM
17. Which aspect of social life does the interpretive perspective mainly focus on?
a. micro-level
b. reorganization
c. problems
d. functions
ANSWER: A
REF: 24
BLM: HO
18. Which perspective looks at how people define situations, create social order, and relate to one another?
a. normative perspective
b. interpretive perspective
c. social perspective
d. ethnomethodology
ANSWER: B
REF: 24
BLM: REM
19. Which perspective has historically been used the least by social gerontologists and is now making a
resurgence over the last few decades?
a. normative perspective
b. psycho-social perspective
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c. associative perspective
d. interpretive perspective
ANSWER: D
REF: 24
BLM: REM
20. Which type of theory exemplifies the interpretive perspective?
a. social pathophysiology
b. ethnocentrism
c. symbolic interactionist
d. disengagement
ANSWER: C
REF: 24
BLM: HO
21. Weber developed the social phenomenological theory. What does Weber say the researcher needs to doin
order to understand a social phenomenon?
a. develop an unbiased description of the phenomena
b. understand the meaning that people in the situation attach to the events and their actions
c. develop a theory to clearly specify the relationships between people and events
d. examine the social structures that enable the phenomenon to occur
ANSWER: B
REF: 25
BLM: REM
22. The Elks Lodge is a Canadian club that has its foundations in social order and organization. The club’sfirst
Canadian female Exalted Ruler, Debby Ray, follows which of the following concepts in which the
individual is the originator of social order and organization?
a. the interpretive perspective
b. conflict theory
c. subculture methodology
d. face-to-face interactions
ANSWER: A
REF: 25
BLM: HO
23. Which of the following is a problem with the interpretive perspective?
a. It suggests that social life does not have quantifiable measures.
b. It talks of social order and organization, without considering their source.
c. It places subjective interpretations on objective phenomena.
d. It does not focus enough on macro-level social phenomena.
ANSWER: D
REF: 25-26
BLM: HO
24. Which of the following terms describes the theories within the interpretive perspective?
a. interpretation constructionism
b. situational constructionism
c. social constructionism
d. interactional constructionism
ANSWER: C
REF: 24
BLM: REM
25. What are the basic units at work in the social system as described by functionalist theories?
a. social institutions
b. families
c. individuals
d. ethnic groups and cohorts
ANSWER: A
REF: 26
BLM: HO
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26. According to structural functionalism, social institutions adjust to one another as the system respondsto
internal and external pressures to maintain which of the following?
a. social evolution
b. dynamic equilibrium
c. static balance
d. homeostasis
ANSWER: B
REF: 26
BLM: REM
27. Structural functionalism sometimes draws an analogy between which of the following?
a. group interactions and the postal system
b. an individual and a social institution
c. society and a living organism
d. macro- and micro-level action
ANSWER: C
REF: 26
BLM: HO
28. Which of the following is an assumption made by structural functionalism?
a. Society changes and evolves in a negative direction more often than a positive direction.
b. Functionalism draws connections only between micro-social structures and individuals’
actions.
c. People conform to norms because of a belief in a society’s underlying value system.
d. Social problems are natural responses, and should be allowed to resolve themselves.
ANSWER: C
REF: 26
BLM: HO
29. How are social problems described in structural functionalism?
a. as internal pressures for change
b. as dysfunctions that should be corrected by planning
c. as conflicts between social institutions
d. as the initial reaction to social change and evolution
ANSWER: B
REF: 26
BLM: HO
30. Which perspective is used most often by gerontologists?
a. interactive perspective
b. age-stratification perspective
c. functionalist perspective
d. conflict perspective
ANSWER: C
REF: 26
BLM: REM
31. What is the focus of age stratification theory?
a. the pressure that leads to the formation of social status and classes
b. the transmission of social life from one generation to the next
c. the movement of age cohorts during the life cycle
d. how micro- and macro-level structures influence the individual’s experience of old age
ANSWER: C
REF: 26-27
BLM: REM
32. Michael J. Fox was born in the 1960s during the height of events such as the Canadian Centennial in196
and the introduction of colour TV in Canada. Fox is a member of an age cohort. Which of the
following sentences describes an age cohort?
a. a group of people born at the same time
b. a unit of study in gerontology
c. a social institution
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d. a social norm that is unique to a specific age group
ANSWER: A
REF: 26
BLM: HO
33. What is the term for a period of life defined by society, such as adolescence or childhood?
a. cohort
b. life stage
c. social age
d. age grade
ANSWER: D
REF: 27
BLM: REM
34. Why is the concept of “age cohorts” important in understanding aging?
a. because people born in the same period experience the same historical events at the same
time in their life cycle
b. because it standardizes the effects of biology and history on the behaviours observed in the
elderly
c. because longitudinal studies cannot control for the effects of cultural changes on
behaviours, and therefore nested designs need to be employed
d. because qualitative, rather than quantitative, study designs are more effective in describing
inter-cohort differences
ANSWER: A
REF: 27
BLM: HO
35. Which of the following does age stratification offer as an explanation of why society changes as peopleage?
a. Each generation of younger people reinvents social norms for itself and cannot rely on
older cohorts for guidance.
b. The norms and roles learned by each new cohort change with society.
c. Social problems appear in predictable waves as each new age strata replaces the preceding
cohort.
d. Social structures are not permanent, as predicted by structural functionalism, but are fluid
and respond to changes.
ANSWER: B
REF: 27
BLM: HO
36. The text compares movement of age cohorts through the life cycle to movement on which of the
following?
a. an airplane
b. an escalator
c. a ship
d. an elevator
ANSWER: B
REF: 27
BLM: REM
37. Which theory relies on structural functionalist assumptions?
a. life course theory
b. cumulative advantage/disadvantage theory
c. activity theory
d. age stratification theory
ANSWER: D
REF: 27
BLM: REM
38. What is the dialectic between individuals and societal structures as described by age stratification
theory?
a. Changes in values lead to changes in social organizations that influence the process of
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aging.
b. As people age, they take on the norms and roles of their age grade.
c. New institutions are the result of the institutions that preceded them.
d. Society is a homogeneous set of structures and functions that most people experience in
the same way.
ANSWER: A
REF: 27
BLM: HO
39. Which of the following is an example of the dialectic between individuals and societal structures
described by age stratification theory?
a. gradual change in radio station formats through market forces
b. growing acceptance of extramarital sex among the older population, and how the young
define their values
c. effect of seniors’ needs on senior centre programs, and of programs on attitudes toward old
age
d. interaction of family, caregivers, and researchers to create the concept of Alzheimer’s
disease
ANSWER: C
REF: 27
BLM: HO
40. Which theory provides new ways to explore differences related to time, period, and cohort?
a. structural investment theory
b. disengagement theory
c. age stratification theory
d. continuity theory
ANSWER: C
REF: 27
BLM: REM
41. Which of the following describes one of the problems with age stratification theory?
a. It overlooks inequality within age cohorts.
b. It does not examine the effects of a changing society on the values of its members.
c. It overemphasizes norms and values, and ignores the effects of folkways and mores.
d. It becomes inaccurate at the micro-level.
ANSWER: A
REF: 27
BLM: HO
42. A limitation of the age stratification theory is that which of the following may have a greater influenceon
people’s lives than the norms and values related to their age grade?
a. political changes
b. socio-historical events
c. inequality within age cohorts
d. personal interpretations of the world
ANSWER: C
REF: 27-28
BLM: HO
43. What does the life course perspective accomplish by incorporating social interaction and social
structure within a functionalist perspective?
a. It completely explains the observed differences in equality between age groups.
b. It bridges the micro- and macro-levels of analysis.
c. It avoids addressing issues related to conflicts between social groups.
d. It provides a holistic approach to the study of gerontology.
ANSWER: B
REF: 28
BLM: HO
44. What occurs in the life course approach at the micro-level?
a. It studies later life in relation to early events and conditions.
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b. It focuses on the struggles between social classes.
c. It tries to explain the conflict within social classes.
d. It shows how social change can create differences between age grades.
ANSWER: A
REF: 28
BLM: HO
45. Why is the life course approach an improvement upon older functionalist theories?
a. It more accurately describes the roles of older people in modern societies.
b. It accounts for differences in life course patterns due to differences between and within
age cohorts.
c. It incorporates physiological, psychological, and social processes into a unified process.
d. It links physical changes to specific social stages.
ANSWER: B
REF: 28
BLM: HO
46. The life course approach specifically studies lives in terms of which of the following?
a. dialectics
b. work, family, and the individual
c. transitions and trajectories
d. shared norms and values
ANSWER: C
REF: 28
BLM: REM
47. Within the life course approach, what are transitions considered to be?
a. positive processes that enable achieving a healthy old age
b. negative processes that prevent achieving a healthy old age
c. relatively stable periods between life-cycle crises
d. changes in social status or social roles
ANSWER: D
REF: 28-29
BLM: REM
48. In the life course approach, what are trajectories?
a. long-term patterns of stability and change
b. a sequence of two or more transitions
c. branch points on the continuum of the life cycle
d. differences within age cohorts that affect aging
ANSWER: A
REF: 28-29
BLM: HO
49. Which of the following is an example of a trajectory in the life course approach?
a. a lifelong marriage
b. retirement
c. parenthood
d. death
ANSWER: A
REF: 29
BLM: HO
50. Which of the following involves the view that society consists of problems between dominant and
subordinate social groups?
a. the normative perspective
b. engagement theory
c. modernization theory
d. the conflict perspective
ANSWER: D
REF: 29
BLM: REM
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51. Political economy theory grew out of the work of which of the following theorists?
a. Weber
b. Goffman
c. Marx
d. Durkheim
ANSWER: C
REF: 30
BLM: REM
52. What does Marxist theory predict regarding older workers?
a. They use their experience and knowledge to hold on to resources and power in industry.
b. They are less valuable to industry, and will be fired or retired to make room for faster,
cheaper workers.
c. They move up in a company until they reach their level of optimum effectiveness.
d. They are more socially disadvantaged than most workers because of the stigma of old age.
ANSWER: B
REF: 30
BLM: REM
53. According to political economy theory, what can the origins of older people’s problems be traced to?
a. the political and economic structure of capitalist society
b. ageism
c. the decline in health and intelligence that occurs as people age
d. the influence of middle-aged, middle-class values on social support programs
ANSWER: A
REF: 30
BLM: REM
54. According to the political economy theory, social programs and policies for older people most benefit
which of the following groups?
a. retirees aged 65–74
b. elderly widows
c. industrialists and the bourgeoisie
d. middle-aged, middle-class professionals
ANSWER: D
REF: 30
BLM: REM
55. Which of the following is a strength of the political economy approach to aging?
a. It accurately explains micro-level phenomena.
b. It openly discusses the poverty and other problems older people face, and it offers
solutions.
c. It incorporates the experiences of individuals to explain the differences between cohorts.
d. It looks beyond the individual to understand the forces that shape individual aging.
ANSWER: D
REF: 30
BLM: HO
56. Which of the following is a problem with the political economy approach?
a. It does not offer viable solutions to social problems.
b. It pays too much attention to an individual’s interpretations of social life.
c. It can overemphasize the poverty and problems older people face.
d. It becomes inaccurate at the micro-level.
ANSWER: C
REF: 30
BLM: HO
57. Which of the following describes the feminist perspective of aging?
a. It distorts the importance of gender in relation to other factors (such as race and social
class).
b. It states that gender defines life experiences, including aging.
c. It reverses the traditional perspective by examining aging in terms of strengths, rather than
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weaknesses.
d. It describes how women have distinct social advantages over men when it comes to aging.
ANSWER: B
REF: 30-31
BLM: HO
58. Which of the following is a strength of the feminist theory of aging?
a. It is congruent with most “mainstream” feminist theories.
b. It illustrates an ability to control for gender, and thereby focus on other social
characteristics (such as race and social class).
c. It acknowledges the “feminization of aging.”
d. It recognizes the importance of social structure and individual characteristics.
ANSWER: D
REF: 31
BLM: HO
59. Period effects cause changes in old age due to which of the following?
a. similar background experiences
b. age group differences
c. the time of measurement
d. physiological changes
ANSWER: C
REF: 33
BLM: HO
60. What is the term for the interpretive theory that is concerned with the social consensus that underlies
issues between the generations?
a. symbolic-interactionism
b. moral economic theory
c. conflict theory
d. disengagement theory
ANSWER: B
REF: 32
BLM: REM
61. A researcher is examining the shared moral assumptions held by the members of a society to describethe
effect of the society’s values on policy. Which of the following is the researcher using?
a. moral economy theory
b. phenomenology
c. symbolic interactionism
d. cross-sectional theory
ANSWER: A
REF: 32
BLM: HO
62. What does critical gerontology highlight?
a. conflict between age groups over economic resources
b. the transition from traditional to modern society
c. movement from one age grade to the next
d. limitations in mainstream gerontological theory
ANSWER: D
REF: 32
BLM: HO
63. Gerontologists describe three causes for changes in old age. Which of the following is one of these
effects?
a. economic effects
b. period effects
c. somatic effects
d. social effects
ANSWER: B
REF: 33
BLM: REM
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64. As a cause for change in later life, age effects are due to which of the following?
a. the effects of the aging population on a society
b. changes within a culture that affect the aging process
c. differences between people of different ages
d. physical decline
ANSWER: D
REF: 33
BLM: HO
65. Which of the following are cohort effects?
a. the observation that no two people or age groups are exactly alike
b. changes in culture that affect the development of groups differently
c. shared backgrounds and experiences of people born around the same time
d. researchers confusing age differences with age changes
ANSWER: C
REF: 33
BLM: HO
66. Which of the following is an example of a period effect?
a. genetic differences between age groups
b. historical events
c. wrinkled skin
d. increased use of medication
ANSWER: A
REF: 33
BLM: HO
67. What must the researcher be careful to do when conducting a study on the effects of aging?
a. allow for a large margin of error due to variability in performance
b. acknowledge the difference between age groups and changes due to aging
c. use at least three methods of data analysis
d. use only the cross-sectional methods of analysis
ANSWER: B
REF: 34
BLM: HO
68. Which of the following defines age-group differences?
a. differences in age between specific groups of people
b. differences between cohort effects
c. similarities of characteristics due to differing age groups
d. differences due to the effects of aging
ANSWER: B
REF: 34
BLM: HO
68. Which of the following defines age changes?
a. the changes that occur between groups of people due to differences in aging
b. age effects
c. changes in characteristics due to aging
d. differences due to the results of aging
70. The influence of factors such as educational differences between cohorts on studies of aging confound
observed age changes. What are these influences known as?
a. mediators
b. cohort variables
c. differences between age groups
d. socialization factors
ANSWER: C
REF: 34
BLM: REM
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71. Researchers such as Baltes and Schaie (1982) found that a large part of the intelligence difference
between younger and older people was due to which of the following?
a. test biases
b. biased subject sampling techniques
c. differences in health status
d. educational differences
ANSWER: D
REF: 34
BLM: REM
72. What is the main problem with a cross-sectional method of analysis in investigating aging?
a. It is very expensive.
b. It requires a long period of time to show significant results.
c. It confuses cohort effects with age changes.
d. It cannot distinguish between cohort effects and environmental effects.
ANSWER: C
REF: 34
BLM: HO
73. Which method of analysis looks at a single group of people through two or more points in time?
a. cross-sectional analysis
b. longitudinal research designs
c. maturational change analysis
d. time-lag comparison
ANSWER: B
REF: 34
BLM: REM
74. Dr. Phillips is doing memory and reaction-time studies on a group of college graduates, and plans toretest them when they retire. What is the term for this type of study?
a. phenomenological experiment
b. cross-sectional methodology
c. longitudinal design
d. test retest validation
ANSWER: C
REF: 34
BLM: HO
75. What is the main benefit of longitudinal research designs?
a. They avoid comparing different cohorts.
b. They avoid environmental effects.
c. They can isolate and study period effects.
d. They give relatively accurate data quickly and at a low cost.
ANSWER: A
REF: 34
BLM: REM
76. Which of the following describes a problem with longitudinal studies?
a. Maturational effects confound changes due to aging.
b. Cohort differences cannot be studied.
c. Environmental changes confound age changes.
d. Economic effects confound changes due to aging.
ANSWER: C
REF: 34
BLM: HO
77. Which of the following is a problem with studies that follow a single group of older people over time?
a. Differences between age groups cannot be compared.
b. A shift in the sex ratio due to the deaths of more men than women.
c. Differences between individual characteristics (such as ethnicity or social class) cannot be
compared.
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d. Lack of randomization invalidates many types of statistical analysis.
ANSWER: B
REF: 34
BLM: HO
78. How do time-lag comparisons work?
a. by assigning members of different cohorts to groups based on specific characteristics
b. by comparing different groups of people of the same age at different points in time
c. by predicting a cohort’s characteristics in the future and then comparing the prediction
with the actual outcomes
d. by following a group for a short period of time and collecting as much data as possible
ANSWER: B
REF: 35
BLM: HO
79. What is the overall purpose of studies that look at different groups of people of the same age at
different points in time?
a. to control for historical or cultural changes
b. to measure differences between cohorts
c. to generate hypotheses
d. to resolve the APC paradox
ANSWER: B
REF: 35
BLM: HO
80. The method of analysis that examines different groups of people of the same age at different points in
time is known as a time-lag comparison. What is the main problem with this type of research?
a. It confuses environmental effects with cohort effects.
b. It confuses cohort effects with maturational effects.
c. It cannot explain why a particular result has appeared.
d. It confuses maturational effects with environmental effects.
ANSWER: A
REF: 36
BLM: HO
81. Which of the following is a problem common to both longitudinal and time-lag studies?
a. They take many years to complete.
b. They confound cohort effects with placebo effects.
c. Results are difficult to interpret without advanced statistical knowledge.
d. Drop-outs can be controlled for through survival analysis statistical techniques.
ANSWER: A
REF: 36
BLM: HO
82. Which of the following is a practical problem related to longitudinal and time-lag studies?
a. results that describe experiences of past cohorts, but do not provide insight into the current
experiences of the elderly
b. a need for institutional support to continue studies beyond the career of the individual
researchers
c. wasted resources resulting from repeating procedures that had been done in previous
phases of the study
d. an inability to control for age effects
ANSWER: B
REF: 36
BLM: HO
83. Some methodological problems have been solved by turning simple cross-sectional and simple
longitudinal designs into which of the following?
a. longi-sectional analyses
b. random representative surveys
c. sequential designs
d. time-cohort comparisons
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ANSWER: C
REF: 36
BLM: REM
84. What is the term for a series of cross-sectional studies during a longer longitudinal study?
a. multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA)
b. sequential design
c. time-lag comparison
d. longi-sectional analysis
ANSWER: B
REF: 36
BLM: REM
85. Which of the following gerontological research designs allows for quick data collection?
a. cross-sectional design
b. cohort design
c. sequential design
d. trend analysis design
ANSWER: C
REF: 36
BLM: HO
86. The Aging in Manitoba longitudinal study provides data on which type of needs for older people?
a. healthcare
b. educational
c. financial
d. social
ANSWER: A
REF: 36
BLM: REM
87. Which of the following describes the methods used by researchers in aging?
a. Methods depend on what best addresses these questions.
b. Methods generally depend on the subjects’ physical condition.
c. Methods are based on standard psychological tests and surveys.
d. Methods are limited by statistical methods.
ANSWER: A
REF: 37
BLM: HO
88. According to the text, what is still the dominant approach in most gerontological research?
a. focus groups
b. longitudinal studies
c. quantitative methods
d. observation
ANSWER: C
REF: 37
BLM: REM
89. Which of the following describes qualitative methods in research on aging?
a. They have decreased as a result of the increased use of computers to provide accurate
statistical analyses.
b. They are able to distinguish between environmental effects and cohort effects.
c. They are less time consuming and expensive than other study methods.
d. They use an interpretive theoretical approach to understand data.
ANSWER: D
REF: 38
BLM: HO
90. What is the biggest limitation of quantitative data methods?
a. Generalizing samples to a larger population is often not appropriate.
b. The structured questions and responses cannot capture complex experiences or
perceptions.
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c. These methods are significantly more expensive.
d. They are difficult to combine with qualitative methods.
ANSWER: B
REF: 39
BLM: HO
91. Which method allows researchers to capture the complexity of social interactions and behaviours?
a. quantitative
b. longitudinal
c. qualitative
d. triangulation
ANSWER: C
REF: 39
BLM: REM
92. Which research method allows a researcher to gather data of a more sensitive nature?
a. triangulation
b. qualitative
c. longitudinal
d. quantitative
ANSWER: B
REF: 39
BLM: HO
93. A gerontologist published data that he received from an elderly Alzheimer’s subject. The legal caregiver
was unaware that this data was obtained from the subject, and was very upset upon learningabout this
issue. What type of ethical breach is this?
Potae.nt potential harm
b. right to privacy
c. true voluntary informed consent
d. confidentiality
ANSWER: C
REF: 39-40
BLM: HO
94. Which practice breaks ethical research guidelines?
a. causing a subject to feel valued in his/her participation
b. refusing to identify research subjects
c. interviewing subjects with advanced cancer
d. causing injury or harm to a participant
ANSWER: D
REF: 40
BLM: HO
95. What must a researcher do if the mental competency of a subject is in question?
a. work to guarantee that the subject’s identity is kept secret
b. abandon the study
c. avoid interviewing such subjects, as the risks are too great
d. ask someone with the legal authority to accede
ANSWER: D
REF: 40
BLM: HO
96. What is the role of ethics review boards in universities and funding agencies?
a. to make sure a study is worthwhile
b to check the credentials of the researcher
.
c. to evaluate potential harm to participants
d to slow down research
.
ANSWER: C
REF: 40
BLM: HO
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97. Which of the following describes applied research in Canada?
a. It has been well funded since the 1970s, resulting in long-term improvements to many
policies and social systems.
b. It has received encouragement through government funding agencies.
c. It has become tainted as a result of poor scientific rigor in several large studies.
d. It has had limited impact on the field of gerontology.
ANSWER: B
REF: 41
BLM: REM
98. According to the text, which is a benefit to Canadian researchers when it comes to collaborative studieson
aging?
a. no ethical breaches occur in such large studies.
b. collaborative studies obtain larger amounts of government funding
c. time frames for research are shorter for the collection of data
d. these studies pool researchers’ skills and resources
ANSWER: D
REF: 42
BLM: REM
99. Which of the following will gerontologists continue to do?
a. use Marxist models of aging
b. link the micro- and macro-levels of theory
c. examine the effect of major societal structures on aging
d. abandon everything but the micro-level of theory
ANSWER: B
REF: 42
BLM: HO
100. Which type of research prizes the richness of everyday social life over numerical data?
a. quantitative
b. interpersonal
c. qualitative
d. numerative
ANSWER: C
REF: 42
BLM: REM
101. According to the text, which of the following skills or methods will allow gerontology researchers the
ability to increase upon their research opportunities about aging?
a. increased education
b. increased use of tablets and laptops
c. increased reading ability
d. increased typing skills
ANSWER: B
REF: 42
BLM: REM
102. Which of the following describes video recording technology?
a. It has created unforeseen privacy issues.
b. It allows researchers to observe behaviour without a researcher present.
c. It is dangerous to the elderly.
d. It is not available to most researchers.
ANSWER: B
REF: 42-43
BLM: HO
103. Which type of research do current studies of aging in Canada show a trend toward?
a. longitudinal
b. cross-sectional
c. interdisciplinary
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d. qualitative
ANSWER: C
REF: 43
BLM: REM
SHORT-ANSWER QUESTIONS
1. Define the term “critical gerontology.” Explain the concept, and list the four themes or “conceptualtools”
that form the basis of critical gerontology.
ANSWER:
Student answers should include the following:
Critical gerontology are the theoretical approaches that look within theory and research to critically examine
and question the underlying and taken-for-granted assumptions about aging. This means thatthere is more
to aging than we know or assume to know. The four themes involved in critical gerontology are:
1. ageing and politics of redistribution
2. gender and ageing
3. ageing, identity, and postmodernism
4. ageing and surveillance
REF: 32
2. What is “age stratification theory?” Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of this theory ofaging.
ANSWER:
Student answers should include the following:
Age stratification theory is also called the aging and society paradigm. This theory focuses on the movement
of age cohorts over the life course and on “the role of social structures in the process of individual aging
and the stratification by age in the society.” According to age stratification theory, people in each cohort
move or flow through society’s predetermined age grades as they age. It also maintains that society also
changes as people age, so the norms and roles learned by each new cohortchanges as society changes.
Advantages:
1. The age stratification theory has helped to separate age differences (between cohorts) from age
changes over the life course (aging).
2. It highlights the impact of historical and societal changes on individuals and cohorts.
3. It shows the relationship between aging and social structure.
Disadvantages:
1. People of the same age do not all experience the world in the same way.
2. The age stratification theory overlooks each person’s interpretation of the world.
3. It makes little reference to individual control or action.
4. The theory also makes little reference to the tensions and conflicts between social groups in societyor
to issues of power.
5. There is little focus on how characteristics such as gender, social class, race and ethnicity create
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inequalities within age cohorts.
REF: 26-28
3. Describe what is meant by the term “risk society” as defined by Marshall and Bengton (2011).
ANSWER:
Student answers should include the following:
There are certain inherent risks in life. An example would be the great recession of 2008. The recession
demonstrated the uncertainties that can be expected in modern life when there is a crash of economic
systems around the world. The risk society is one in which social institutions provide less “insurance”
against the vicissitudes of life, such as job loss or loss of one’s health, and individuals areexpected to
assume responsibility to navigate these risks.”
REF: 32-33
ESSAY QUESTIONS
1. Describe the framework of narrative gerontology, and provide three examples of narrative
gerontology to explain this approach to the study of aging.
ANSWER:
Student answers will vary, but should include the following:
Narrative gerontology seeks to understand aging from the “inside” of aging by examining the narrativesor
life stories that people tell in order to organize and make sense of their lives, and their experiences ofaging.
Individual examples will vary.
REF: 31-32
2. List and discuss some of the larger-scale organizations performing gerontological research in
Canada.
ANSWER:
Student answers will vary, but should include the following:
Gerontology research in Canada has been undergoing some important shifts. The federal governmentis
also funding a number of research studies. Some of the sources of information include the following
organizations:
1. The Institute of Aging (IA) is a community of researchers from universities and hospitals across
Canada. It also includes practitioners, volunteer health organizations, and older adults. They share a
common goal: to increase knowledge about aging, to promote healthy aging, and toaddress the
challenges of an aging population.
2. The Social and Economic Dimensions of an Aging Population (SEDAP) is a multidisciplinary
research program located at McMaster University. The first phase of the program ran from 1999 to 2004.
The second phase ran from 2005 to 2011. Both projects received funding from the Social Sciences and
Humanities Research Council (SSHRC). These projects produced research on a wide range of social and
economic issues that will help to shape policies and programs to improve the lives
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of older Canadians.
3. In 2003, another interdisciplinary project entitled Workforce Aging in the New Economy: A Comparative
Study of Information Technology Employment received funding from the SSHRC, and studied how growth
in information technology, employment, and workforce aging in several countries has impacted the world.
The results will assist with responding to an aging workforce and diversity in theworkplace.
REF: 41-42
3. Explain the feminist approach to aging. Then conduct research (on the Internet or in your local
community) to find a woman who believes in the feminist approach. What are her theories about
aging? Do you agree with her perspective? Explain.
ANSWER:
Student answers will vary, but should include the following:
The feminist approach views gender as a defining characteristic in social interaction and life experiences, as
well as in the process and experience of aging; gender is seen as socially constructed,with men being more
advantaged than women in society.
Some famous Canadian feminists include Therese Casgrain, Judy Rebick, Rita McNeil, Sarah McLachlan,
Nellie McClung, Agnes Macphail, Maureen McTeer, Alanis Morrissette, and Ellen Page.
REF: 30-31
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CHAPTER 3: AGING IN CANADA AND THE WORLD TODAY
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. Between 1921 and 2011, Canada’s older population grew at how many times more than the rate of the
general population?
a. two
b. three
c. four
d. five
ANSWER: B
REF: 46
BLM: REM
2. Which of the following facts concerning the Canadian population in 2011 is true?
a. The population of people aged 0–14 years decreased by 9%.
b. Older people accounted for twice the proportion of the population of most other Western
countries.
c. The proportion of people aged 65 and over rose by 5% from 1951 levels.
d. Canada’s population is one of the older populations within the world.
ANSWER: D
REF: 46
BLM: REM
3. By 2061, the proportion of Canada’s population aged 65 and over may be over what percentage of the
total population?
a. 12
b. 25
c. 63
d. 84
ANSWER: B
REF: 46
BLM: REM
4. In 2011, The United Nations world population report stated that what percentage of the world’s
population was aged 60 years or older?
a. 12%
b. 16%
c. 20%
d. 24%
ANSWER: A
REF: 46
BLM: REM
5. Which of the following countries is among the “less developed nations” of the world?
a. Australia
b. Ethiopia
c. India
d. Bangladesh
ANSWER: C
REF: 47
BLM: HO
6. In 2010, Yoshi and his wife lived in a developed country in which low fertility rates and low death
rates lead to a continuance in population aging. In which country did the couple live?
a. China
b. India
c. Japan
d. Thailand
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