socialization is the act or effect of socializing, that is, of to make social, to gather in society. It is the extension of particular advantages, through laws and decrees, to the entire society. It is the process of integrating individuals into a group.
In sociology, socialization is the process by which the individual, in the biological sense, is integrated into a society. Through socialization, the individual develops the collective feeling of social solidarity and a spirit of cooperation, acquiring the habits that enable him to live in a society.
Socialization means learning or education, in the broadest sense of the word, learning that begins in early childhood and only ends with the person's death.
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Socialization implies adapting to certain cultural patterns existing in society, that is, it is the tendency to live in society; it is civility (set of formalities, observed among themselves by citizens, when well educated).
By socialization, the Pernambuco sociologist Gilberto Freire (1900-1987) writes:
"It is the condition of the (biological) individual developed, within the social organization and culture, in person or social man, by the acquisition of status or status, developed as a member of a group or of several groups.”