I believe social class, income, background, and education, all leave a different statistical mark no matter where anyone falls in. If we are looking at a particular level of someone’s motivational drive and rank it solely from where they stand on the social scale chances are it may be inaccurate. When measuring an individual social class we tend to look at someone’s family background because we conclude someone’s wealth. If someone falls under the working class, their drive to work even more than twice as hard is present enough for them to provide the necessities they need, compared to someone in the upper middle class their drive may be a little bit effortless but they still manage to make a decent amount that covers almost all of their profits.
If I met someone who came from the upper middle class, then I think that that person would inspire me to work a little bit harder not only for myself but for my family since my grandparents fall under the working class, they receive very little income and I would like to help them out as much as I can. When I was in class with someone who appeared to be an upper middle class they appeared very outspoken and had a lot of expensive accessories that were authentic, their interactions with everyone else seemed just like everyone else, maybe they weren’t upper middle class and I was just categorizing based on their appearance. This makes me feel like everyone stereotypes everyone based on their appearances before getting to know the person not personally but based on that first interaction.