1 / 125

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY. Which of the Following Is an Example of a Group?. Cheerleaders at a school A high school football team People lined up to vote Women at a baby shower Pedestrians at a crosswalk. Cheerleaders at a School. Football Team. People Lined Up to Vote. Women at a Baby Shower.

duff
Download Presentation

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY

  2. Which of the Following Is an Example of a Group? • Cheerleaders at a school • A high school football team • People lined up to vote • Women at a baby shower • Pedestrians at a crosswalk

  3. Cheerleaders at a School

  4. Football Team

  5. People Lined Up to Vote

  6. Women at a Baby Shower

  7. Pedestrians in a Crosswalk

  8. Primary Groups • Families, couples in love, street gangs, social clubs • Relationships that are face-to-face and personal

  9. Four Features of a Primary Group • Continuous, face-to-face interaction • Strong ties • Multifaceted • Enduring

  10. Secondary Groups • Organized around specific, impersonal goals • Not as much interaction as in primary groups • School classes, political parties, sports teams

  11. Secondary Group Characteristics • Limited face-to-face interaction • Modest or weak personal identity with the group • Weak ties of affection • Limited/shallow relations • Not very enduring

  12. Why Join a Group ? • To satisfy the need to belong • To compare experiences • To use group standards to evaluate ourselves • For companionship • To lessen anxiety and provide comfort • Group accomplishments

  13. A Case Study • How many of the reasons for joining a group exist for the cheerleaders at San Luis Obispo Senior High School in California?

  14. Satisfy Our Need to Belong • “I joined the group so that we can entertain the students. I enjoy belonging to this group.”

  15. Allows Us to Accomplish Things We Could Not Do Alone • “Yes, we all work together and are able to impress the people we perform for.”

  16. Use Group Standards for Evaluation • “Yes, definitely, to see how others are like me.”

  17. Companionship • “We are like a family, a good team. I have a great deal of friends on the cheer and dance team and I made a lot of new friends. It’s a big plus when you get along with everyone.”

  18. ComparingOurselves To Others • “I had been dancing and performing my whole life and I wanted to see where I stood in a performing group.”

  19. Peer Groups • A group of friends or associates of about the same age and social position • Form cliques, clubs, gangs

  20. Reference Groups • A group that serves as a standard for evaluating one’s achievement, behavior, or values

  21. Group Dynamics • The impact of group size • The dyad, or two-person group • The triad • Multiples (division of labor)

  22. The Triad

  23. Leadership • Groups need leaders for two reasons 1. To direct tasks 2. Maintain good spirits • Groupthink

  24. Groupthink • Emphasizes group decisions in large organizations • People working together will make better decisions than an individual

  25. When Does Groupthink Occur? • When group members are unable to evaluate other available options • Inability to comprehend negative consequences

  26. Conditions for Groupthink • The group is isolated from the outside • There are time limits • Not having an impartial leader

  27. Examples of Groupthink • Pearl Harbor and FDR • JFK’S invasion of Cuba • Nixon’s Watergate fiasco • Waco, Texas standoff

  28. Pearl Harbor: December 7, 1941 • U.S. leaders decide not to take special measures to defend Pearl Harbor, making it an easy target for the Japanese • “A date which will live in infamy”

  29. The Bay of Pigs Invasion • An inheritance from Ike • The invasion plan • JFK’s response

  30. Watergate: June 1972 • Bungled burglary • CREEP • 29 people indicted or arrested

  31. “I Am Not a Crook”

  32. Waco, Texas: 1993 • Standoff between federal agents and David Koresh • The Attorney General had waited long enough

  33. In-groups • A group with which a person identifies and feels that he or she belongs • A “greedy group”

  34. Characteristics of In-groups • 1. Sacrifice • 2. Investment • 3. Renunciation • 4. Communication • 5. Mortification • 6. Transcendence

  35. Out-groups • A group with which a person does not identify and does not feel that he or she belongs to

  36. Gangs

  37. Types Of Gangs • Social gangs • Delinquent gangs • Violent gangs

  38. Gang Locations • L.A. is the gang capital of America • Chicago, Seattle, Kansas City • Importance of drugs

  39. Public Housing Projects • A breeding ground for gangs • Family structure • “Trophies” / “graveyards”

  40. Ethnic/Gender Breakdowns • In the 1950s, gang members tended to be white males • Today four-fifths of gang members are African-American or Latino • Women have now entered the ranks as well

  41. History of Gangs • Born out of the chaos of inner city life (“Zoot Suit riots”) • Gangs offer ultimate control • Black gangs arose after the Watts riots in 1965

  42. Gang Divisions • Gang divisions are called “sets” • There are variations even within each set • Gangs and colors

  43. Hand Symbols • Hand signals are used as defiant gestures toward other gangs • Each gang has their own hand signals

  44. Gangbanging • Los Vatos Locos/Latino gang of the 1970s • Drugs of the 70’s/PCP

  45. Going “Loc” • The Boo-Yah Tribe • Sawed-off shotguns • New drugs: speed, crack-laced joints

  46. Levels of Membership

  47. Why Join a Gang? • Power • Identity • A surrogate family • Security

  48. Women in Gangs • Makeup • The raccoon look • Tattoos • Clothes • Pregnancy

  49. Gang Members in Prison • When someone goes to prison in California, they get put into a “car” • A gang member’s “ride” in prison

  50. Self-Help Groups

More Related