Influence of Cultural Factors in Socialisation
📘 4.3 Influence of Cultural Factors in Socialisation (संस्कृति और सामाजिकरण पर प्रभाव)
🧠 What is Socialisation?
Socialisation is the process through which an individual learns the norms, values, beliefs, customs, and social roles of their society. It begins at birth and continues throughout life.
🌍 What is Culture?
Culture is a set of shared beliefs, practices, art, morals, laws, customs, and habits acquired by individuals as members of society.
✍️ “Culture is the cradle; socialisation is the process of shaping within it.”
🔗 Relationship Between Culture and Socialisation
Culture provides the content, and socialisation is the process through which this content is passed from one generation to another.
Aspect | Culture | Socialisation |
---|---|---|
Role | Provides norms & values | Transmits them to the individual |
Nature | Static/dynamic | Continuous and lifelong |
Focus | Collective behaviour | Individual adaptation |
🔑 Agents of Socialisation in Cultural Context
Agent | Role |
---|---|
👨👩👧👦 Family | Teaches language, customs, religion, gender roles |
🏫 School | Teaches discipline, competition, citizenship |
🧑🤝🧑 Peer Groups | Reinforce or challenge cultural values |
📺 Media | Shapes perception of identity, gender, success |
🙏 Religion | Provides moral framework, rituals, social behaviour |
🌆 Community & Caste | Affects interaction patterns, traditions, beliefs |
🇮🇳 Indian Cultural Examples in Socialisation
- Joint Family Culture:
Teaches values of obedience, respect for elders, and collectivism. - Caste System:
Historically shaped occupation choices and social mobility, often unconsciously internalised. - Festivals & Rituals:
Events like Raksha Bandhan and Diwali reinforce familial roles and community bonding. - Language Diversity:
Multilingual exposure influences identity formation and cultural flexibility. - Gender Roles:
In rural areas, girls are still socialised into domestic roles, while urban settings are shifting to egalitarian norms.
🧪 Psychological Impact of Cultural Socialisation
Cultural Influence | Psychological Outcome |
---|---|
Respect for hierarchy (e.g., in Gurukuls) | Less assertiveness but high obedience |
Emphasis on community | Strong group identity but lower individualism |
Patriarchal norms | Reinforcement of gender roles; challenges in self-concept among girls |
Modern global culture (via OTT, apps) | Increasing value dissonance in urban youth |
🧠 Key Theories
- Vygotsky’s Sociocultural Theory
- Cognitive development is rooted in social interactions within a cultural context.
- Concepts like Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) emerge from guided learning.
- Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Model
- Considers multiple layers of environment (family, peers, culture, society) influencing development.
- Bandura’s Social Learning Theory
- Children observe and imitate culturally appropriate behaviours.
🎯 UPSC Application
- Education Policy: NEP 2020 focuses on culturally relevant teaching and mother tongue education.
- Tribal Welfare: Respecting tribal culture in schooling enhances participation.
- Gender Equality Schemes: Must address deep-rooted cultural socialisation.
📝 “Socialisation without understanding culture leads to policy failures.”
🔬 Research Studies
- UNICEF India Study: Early marriage norms in Rajasthan socialised through tradition, not logic → Interventions failed until culture-specific media content was used.
- Azim Premji Foundation: Schools in tribal Odisha that included folktales, local songs in curriculum saw better attendance.
📌 Practice-Based Scenarios
- A child raised in a tribal community learns cooperation and community sharing but may struggle in competitive urban schooling.
- Urban youth exposed to Western media often face identity conflict between traditional and global values.
✅ Summary
- Culture shapes what is learned, socialisation shapes how it’s learned.
- Both are key to personality development, attitude formation, and role identity.
- Understanding cultural influence is vital for mental health practitioners, teachers, administrators, and policymakers.
🧩 Mains Answer Framework
Intro: Define both terms
Body:
- Relationship between the two
- Cultural agents of socialisation
- Indian examples (gender roles, family, caste)
- Theories (Vygotsky, Bandura)
Conclusion: Importance in policymaking and behaviour shaping