Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four...

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* Social Groups & Group Behaviour

Transcript of Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four...

Page 1: Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics: * They interact regularly and influence each other.

*Social Groups & Group

Behaviour

Page 2: Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics: * They interact regularly and influence each other.

*Characteristics of a Social GroupSocial Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics:

*They interact regularly and influence each other.

*They believe they have something in common (a shared identity).

*They have an informal or formal social structure with leaders and followers.

*They have a group consensus on certain values, behaviours, and goals.

Page 3: Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics: * They interact regularly and influence each other.

*Social groups can have an informal (eg., friends) or formal (eg., political affiliations) structure

*Several people gathered together at the same time (eg. Class, bus stop…) do not form a social group. This collection of people is called an aggregate.

*Characteristics of a Social Group

Page 4: Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics: * They interact regularly and influence each other.

*3 Viewpoints on Social Groups*Anthropological View*Primates work in groups to

protect and find scarce food sources

*Humans - traced back to hunter-gather societies

*As humans progressed, groups extended to include various classes based on occupations

*Modern society - extended further – b/c technology

Page 5: Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics: * They interact regularly and influence each other.

*3 Viewpoints on Social Groups*Sociological View*Focus on types of groups

today and how they affect behaviour.

*2 groups:*Primary – small group with

personal relationship (eg., family, peers)

*Secondary – impersonal, formal, temporary. Judged for what member can do more than who they are (eg., sport team)

Page 6: Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics: * They interact regularly and influence each other.

*Sociological Aspects of a Social Group*Social groups have a powerful impact on our

thinking and behaviour

*Within a social group there are:

*Roles – beh. that individuals w/in a group are expected to perform

*Norms – guidelines for our beh. for our various roles

*Sanctions – how the group rewards or punishes members in order to control their behaviour (eg., paycheque, grades)

*The roles that we are assigned/acquire w/in our various social groups have a dramatic impact on thinking, attitudes and our behaviour

Page 7: Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics: * They interact regularly and influence each other.

*On the Sidewalk Bleeding

Page 8: Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics: * They interact regularly and influence each other.

*Show Video

Page 9: Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics: * They interact regularly and influence each other.

*On the Sidewalk Bleeding*Questions

*What social groups existed in the story?

*What role does Andy play in his social group?

*What attitudes and behaviours did Andy’s as well as the other group present?

*What sanctions are placed on these groups that guide their behaviour?

*What were the attitudes of the passers by towards Andy’s social group?

*Why does Andy take off his jacket?

*Why would Andy, or anyone else, want to join a social group such as a gang?

Page 10: Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics: * They interact regularly and influence each other.

*3 Viewpoints on Social Groups*Psychological View*Focus on how an individual’s

thoughts, feelings and actions are affected by groups

*Examine willingness to conform

Page 12: Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics: * They interact regularly and influence each other.

*Psychological Factors Affecting Conformity*Four common factors that influence conformity:

*Group Attractiveness – more attractive = more to conform. Less status w/in group = more likely to follow

*Group Unanimity – likely to conform when total agreement exists

*Public vs. Private Response - people are more likely to conform than express unique opinions

*Nature of the Task – vague questions/tasks are easy to conform to – less likely to conform if a task/question is specific and factual

Page 13: Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics: * They interact regularly and influence each other.

*Psychological Groupthink*Groupthink occurs when group members have

such a strong desire to reach a consensus or agreement that the group loses its ability to critically examine alternatives

*Group members become so focused on the consensus answer, they no longer think of possible alternatives and defend the position they have taken when criticised by outsiders

Page 14: Social Scientists define a social group as a group of two or more people who have four characteristics: * They interact regularly and influence each other.

Eight symptoms of groupthink:Illusion of invulnerability – promotes risk taking

Collective rationalization – don’t listen to warnings

Belief in inherent morality – ignore ethical consequences because of perceived righteousness

Stereotyped views of out-groups – stereotyping enemy as bad

Direct pressure on dissenters – pressure to NOT question

Self-censorship – do not express doubt

Illusion of unanimity – judgments are assumed to be unanimous.

Self-appointed ‘mindguards’ – Members protect the group