What is Socialisation in Sociology?

Socialisation in Sociology: A Complete Guide to Primary & Secondary Agents.
Explore the lifelong process of socialisation, from primary childhood development to resocialisation in total institutions. This guide breaks down the core functions of family, education, and media, while analyzing key sociological theories from Talcott Parsons (Functionalism), Louis Althusser (Marxism), and G.H. Mead (Symbolic Interactionism). Perfect for UPSC, UGC NET, and A-Level Sociology students.

Sociology  /  Core Concepts  /  Module 01

What is Socialisation
in Sociology?

A complete guide to how individuals learn to become members of society — from birth to adulthood — covering all types, agents, and major theories.

A-Level & Degree UPSC / UGC NET Exam Ready ~12 min read
Core Definition

Socialisation is the lifelong process through which individuals learn and internalise the norms, values, beliefs, behaviours, and cultural practices of the society they are born into — transforming a biological organism into a functioning social human being.

01

Why socialisation matters in sociology

Without socialisation
Feral children cases
Cases like Genie Wiley (1970, USA) and Victor of Aveyron show that children raised without social contact could not speak, showed no social behaviour, and struggled to develop even when later given care. Biology alone does not produce social humans.
With socialisation
A shared social world
Socialisation creates shared culture — it is the mechanism by which society reproduces itself across generations. Without it, there would be no shared language, no shared norms, no social order. It is the glue that holds society together.
02

Types of socialisation

Type 01
Primary Socialisation
The first and most fundamental stage, occurring in early childhood. This is where an infant learns the basic norms and values of society — language, emotional regulation, right from wrong, and fundamental identity. It creates the deepest and most lasting impressions. Talcott Parsons argued this is the single most important stage.
Family Parents Siblings
Type 02
Secondary Socialisation
Takes place outside the home as the child grows. The individual learns institutional norms — how to behave in school, in public, in a workplace. It expands the individual’s social world and teaches formal rules and roles. Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann distinguished this from primary socialisation in their landmark work.
School Peer groups Religion Media
Type 03
Anticipatory Socialisation
The process of learning norms and behaviours associated with a role one has not yet assumed. For example, a medical student begins acting like a doctor before graduating, or a future parent mentally rehearses parenthood. First theorised by Robert Merton (1949).
Workplace Higher education Role models
Type 04
Resocialisation
A radical process in which a person abandons their previous identity and adopts new norms and values — sometimes involuntarily. Erving Goffman studied this in “total institutions” such as prisons, psychiatric hospitals, and the military, where systematic breaking and rebuilding of identity occurs.
Prisons Military Rehab centres
03

Agents of socialisation

Agent 01 — Most powerful
Family
The primary agent. Responsible for primary socialisation. The family transmits language, values, religion, gender roles, class identity and cultural practices. It shapes the deepest layers of personality and identity.
Agent 02
Education
Schools teach not just academic subjects but also the hidden curriculum — punctuality, obedience, competition, and social hierarchy. Marxists argue schools reproduce class inequality; functionalists see them as meritocratic sorting systems.
Agent 03
Peer groups
Especially powerful in adolescence. Peers provide a space outside family authority where individuals test and construct identity. They enforce subcultural norms through acceptance, ridicule, and exclusion.
Agent 04
Mass media & social media
Now arguably the most pervasive agent. Media shapes norms around gender, beauty, consumption, politics, and violence. Stuart Hall’s encoding/decoding model shows how media messages are transmitted and interpreted.
Agent 05
Religion
Transmits moral frameworks, community identity, and a sense of the sacred. Durkheim saw religion as the socialising force that binds society together. In India, religious socialisation shapes caste, diet, marriage and gender roles profoundly.
Agent 06
Workplace
Introduces adults to occupational culture, professional norms, hierarchy, and identity. Becoming a doctor, soldier, or teacher involves internalising a whole new set of values. This is where anticipatory socialisation becomes real.

“Society can only survive if there exists among its members a sufficient degree of homogeneity; education perpetuates and reinforces this homogeneity by fixing in the child, from the beginning, the essential similarities which collective life demands.”

— Émile Durkheim, 1956
04

Sociological theories of socialisation

For Parsons, socialisation is the mechanism through which society’s core values are transmitted to each new generation, ensuring the system continues to function smoothly. He saw the family as the primary socialising institution, with two critical functions: the stabilisation of adult personalities and the primary socialisation of children.

Parsons argued that successful socialisation produces individuals who have internalised (made their own) the shared values of society — so thoroughly that they want to conform, not because they are forced to, but because it feels natural. This is the key to social order in a functionalist framework.

Key concept: Value consensus — socialisation produces agreement on core values, which is the foundation of social stability.

Criticism: Parsons ignores conflict, inequality, and resistance. He assumes one dominant value system exists and ignores that different groups are socialised into very different norms depending on class, race, and gender.

Louis Althusser argued that socialisation is fundamentally a tool of class domination. Institutions like education, religion, and the media function as Ideological State Apparatuses (ISAs) — they socialise working-class children into accepting their own exploitation as natural and inevitable.

Unlike the police or army (Repressive State Apparatuses that rule by force), ISAs rule by consent — they make people want to accept the system. The school, for Althusser, is the most powerful ISA in capitalist society — it reproduces the relations of production by training workers for their future roles while naturalising capitalist ideology.

Key concept: Ideological reproduction — socialisation does not liberate; it chains people to their class position by making inequality feel natural.

Evaluation: Althusser is criticised for being overly deterministic — he leaves no room for human agency, resistance, or the possibility of change. Paul Willis’s study of working-class boys (Learning to Labour, 1977) showed they actively resisted school socialisation.

George Herbert Mead rejected the idea that the self is biologically given. Instead, the self emerges through social interaction — specifically through learning to see yourself through the eyes of others. Mead called this “taking the role of the other.”

He identified two components of the self: the I (the spontaneous, creative, individual self — the subject) and the Me (the socialised self — the internalised attitudes and expectations of others). Socialisation builds the “Me.” The “I” reacts to it. Social identity is the ongoing conversation between them.

Mead also outlined stages of play: the play stage (imitating specific others — playing mummy), the game stage (internalising multiple roles simultaneously), and the internalisation of the Generalised Other (the norms of society as a whole).

Key concept: Generalised Other — the internalised sense of how “society in general” expects you to behave.

Goffman saw social life as a theatrical performance. Through socialisation, individuals learn the scripts, props, and stage directions required for different social situations. This is his concept of impression management. We present different versions of ourselves on the “front stage” (in public) and behave differently “backstage” (in private).

Goffman’s concept of stigma also relates to socialisation: society socialises us to perceive certain attributes (disability, mental illness, deviance) as shameful or discrediting — showing that socialisation can produce exclusion, not just integration.

Key concept: Presentation of self — socialisation teaches us not just how to behave, but how to perform identity for different audiences.

Bourdieu’s concept of habitus is one of the most sophisticated accounts of socialisation in sociology. Habitus refers to the set of durable, transposable dispositions — ways of thinking, feeling, and acting — that are acquired through socialisation within a particular social class and field.

Crucially, habitus operates below conscious awareness. It is not a set of rules we consciously follow; it is a “feel for the game” that shapes our choices, tastes, and behaviours as if naturally. Middle-class habitus makes university feel natural and appropriate; working-class habitus can make it feel alien — a phenomenon Bourdieu called misrecognition.

Linked to habitus is cultural capital — the knowledge, skills, behaviours, and credentials valued by dominant culture, which are transmitted through socialisation and translate into social advantage.

Key concept: Habitus — socialisation writes itself into the body, producing a social being who reproduces their class position as though choosing freely.

Ann Oakley argued that gender differences between men and women are not natural — they are the product of gender socialisation. From birth, children are socialised into gender roles through four mechanisms: manipulation (encouraging gender-appropriate behaviour), canalisation (directing children towards gender-appropriate toys and activities), verbal appellation (gendered language), and different activities for boys and girls.

Feminist theory more broadly argues that socialisation is a key mechanism of patriarchy — it produces docile, nurturing femininity and dominant, assertive masculinity, naturalising a hierarchy that serves male interests. Girls are socialised into their own subordination.

Key concept: Gender socialisation — patriarchal society reproduces gender inequality by training children from birth to inhabit gendered roles.
05

Key thinkers at a glance

Émile Durkheim
1858 – 1917
Socialisation produces the moral consensus that holds society together. Education is socialisation in its most formal sense.
Talcott Parsons
1902 – 1979
Socialisation = value internalisation. The family is the primary site. Produces integrated, functional social actors.
George H. Mead
1863 – 1931
The self (I + Me) is formed through social interaction. “Taking the role of the other” is the mechanism of socialisation.
Erving Goffman
1922 – 1982
Socialisation teaches impression management. We learn to perform identity differently on front and back stages.
Pierre Bourdieu
1930 – 2002
Habitus: socialisation produces embodied class dispositions that operate unconsciously and reproduce inequality.
Louis Althusser
1918 – 1990
ISAs (schools, media, religion) socialise subjects into accepting capitalist ideology as natural.
06

Key terms glossary

Socialisation
The lifelong process of learning norms, values, and behaviours of a society.
Primary socialisation
Early childhood learning within the family — the most formative stage.
Secondary socialisation
Learning that occurs outside the home through school, peers, media, and religion.
Resocialisation
Radical identity replacement in total institutions (Goffman).
Agents of socialisation
Institutions and groups through which socialisation occurs: family, school, media, religion, peers.
Habitus
Bourdieu’s term for the unconscious, embodied dispositions produced by class socialisation.
Value consensus
Parsons’ idea that socialisation produces shared values essential to social stability.
Generalised other
Mead’s term for the internalised sense of society’s collective expectations.
Cultural capital
Knowledge and behaviours valued by dominant culture — transmitted through middle-class socialisation.
Hidden curriculum
Unofficial lessons schools teach: conformity, hierarchy, punctuality, gender roles.
07

Exam preparation

Must-know for exam answers
  1. Define precisely: Always open with a clear definition — “Socialisation is the process through which individuals learn the norms, values, and practices of their society.”
  2. Distinguish types: Name and explain primary, secondary, anticipatory, and resocialisation. Use examples for each.
  3. Name agents: Family, education, peer groups, media, religion, workplace — and explain the role of each.
  4. Apply theories: Parsons (functionalist), Althusser (Marxist), Mead (interactionist), Bourdieu (structuralist), Oakley (feminist). Know each perspective’s view and its critics.
  5. Use evidence: Feral children for why it matters; Paul Willis for resistance; Bourdieu’s French education studies for class reproduction; Mead’s “I and Me” for identity formation.
  6. Evaluate every theory: No theory goes unchallenged. Parsons ignores conflict; Althusser ignores agency; Mead ignores structure. Always end with critique.
08

Test yourself — MCQ

0 of 5 answered
Up next in this series
Agents of Socialisation — deep dive
socialisation primary socialisation Parsons Bourdieu habitus A-Level sociology UGC NET

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