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Aim: What factors influence conformist behavior?

Aim: What factors influence conformist behavior?. Do Now: Which line on the second card most closely matches the length of the line on the first card?. The Asch Experiment. Distortion of Perception: “The others are right and I’m wrong.”

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Aim: What factors influence conformist behavior?

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  1. Aim: What factors influence conformist behavior? Do Now: Which line on the second card most closely matches the length of the line on the first card?

  2. The Asch Experiment

  3. Distortion of Perception: “The others are right and I’m wrong.” • Distortion of Judgment: “I think I’m right, but everyone else is saying otherwise, so I must be wrong.” • Distortion of Action: “I know I’m right, but I don’t want to go against the group, so I’ll conform.” Asch Experiment – Conformity types

  4. conformity – behavior that matches group expectations. Is decision making easier alone, or with a group? • People often make riskier decisions when with a group • Less sole responsibility Groupthink: poor decisions that result from discouraging dissent. What is conformity?

  5. What are some of the characteristics of leaders? Are some people natural leaders? Explain.

  6. Leadership is best understood as a characteristic of social structure, rather than an attribute of particular individuals. Leadership

  7. Original problem-solvers who are comfortable acting on their own initiative. • Self-confident • Good at living under stress • More talkative than followers • Taller • Perceived as more attractive Leaders do share certain characteristics:

  8. Instrumental: Primarily concerned with making decisions that will help the group achieve its goals. • Expressive (socioemotional): Concentrates on keeping the group’s morale high. All small groups tend to develop two distinct leaders.

  9. Norms: rules defining appropriate and inappropriate behavior. Norms are expected behavior • Folkways: norms that lack moral significance. Violation of folkways do not bring serious consequences. • Mores: Norms that have moral importance and that should be followed by members of a society. • Taboos: The most serious mores. It is a norm that is so strong that its violation demands punishment by the group (or some think, the supernatural). • Law: Norms that are formally defined and enforced by officials. Some mores become laws. What rules encourage conformity?

  10. What is Deviance: • Make a short list of what you consider to be deviant behavior. Within any culture, people are expected to follow certain behaviors

  11. behavior that departs from societal or group norms. • It can include many types of behavior. • It can vary from group to group, or society to society. Deviance:

  12. Internal social control: This is like your conscience. You do something because you know it is right, or don’t do something because you know it is wrong. This is known as internalization of norms. • External social control: behaving in a specific way because of pressure from an outside source or authority. • This pressure can be in the form of punishment or a reward. Similar to what psychologists might call positive or negative reinforcement. • In Sociology, these outside pressures are called social sanctions. Social Control

  13. Positive sanctions: rewards, praise, smiles of approval, increases in allowance, promotions • Negative Sanctions: criticism, fines, imprisonment • Formal Sanctions: come from an officially recognized authority such as the government, police, or school. • Examples include speeding tickets or detention (negative), or an award (positive). • Informal Sanctions: come from informal social groups like friends or family. • Examples would be getting grounded or gossiped about (negative), or smiled at (positive). Social Sanctions

  14. Use the following terms to formulate questions to your partners: • 1. Why… • 2. Explain… • 3. What if… • 4. Predict… • 5. Defend… • 6. Propose… Aim: What is Deviance?Do Now: Analyze this statement: “Deviance, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder.”

  15. Exit Slip: You are invisible for 24 hours. What do you do?

  16. How does peer pressure relate to our discussion of deviance? • Which do people most respond to? Why? • What reinforces internal social control? • What reinforces external social control? Responding to Social Control:

  17. Functionalists argue that deviance serves a positive social function by clarifying moral boundaries and promoting social cohesion. • Conflict theorists believe that a society’s inequalities are reproduced in its definitions of deviance, so that the less powerful are more likely to be criminalized. Why is what he’s doing against the law? Theories of Deviance Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  18. Quinney:, 1977- norm violation occurs among both the rich and the poor. The rich commit crimes of domination, and do so because they can get away with it. The poor commit crimes of predatory deviance to survive, and do so because they have no other options. Conflict Theory of Deviance (Cont’d)

  19. Conflict theorists believe that most sociologists are too willing to accept elites’ definitions of deviance. Mainstream sociologists allow the dominant class to dictate their research agenda. They do not research misbehavior of elites, or the inequality of criminal law. • • Current drug laws mandate more severe penalties for crack possession than possession of cocaine in the powdered form. • Research shows that minorities are more often arrested for crack, and white offenders for powdered cocaine. Conflict Theory of Deviance (Cont’d)

  20. Merton’s structural strain theory argues that the tension or strain between socially approved goals and an individual’s ability to meet those goals through socially approved means will lead to deviance as individuals reject either the goals (achieving success), the means (hard work, education), or both. Theories of Deviance (Cont’d) Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  21. Merton’s Adaptations Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  22. Ritualist Conformist Innovator Retreatist Rebel Which type are you? Do you follow socially accepted means and goals? You’re a conformist. Doing the bare minimum? You’re probably a ritualist. If you’re like WorldCom CEO Bernard Ebbers and want to earn big rewards but have few scruples about how you reach them, you’re an innovator. You’re a retreatist if you reject all means and goals of society. You’re a rebel, like Che Guevara, if you not only reject social means and goals but also want to destroy society itself and replace it with a new paradigm.

  23. Symbolic Interactionist theories of deviance focus on how interpersonal relations and everyday interactions shape definitions of deviance and influence those who engage in deviant behavior. • Differential association theory states that we learn to be deviant through our associations with deviant peers. Theories of Deviance (cont’d)

  24. Labeling theory claims that deviance is a consequence of external judgments, or labels, which both modify the individual’s self-concept and change the way others respond to the labeled person. • Labeling theory is also related to the idea of the self-fulfilling prophecy, which is a prediction that causes itself to come true. Theories of Deviance (cont’d) Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  25. Labeling is often preceded by a degradation ceremony - a ceremony in which authority figure(s) who are perceived to have legitimate power devalue, degrade, or otherwise label a person as deviant. • What examples of degradation ceremonies can you name? Degradation Ceremonies Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  26. A stigma is Erving Goffman’s term for any physical or social attribute that devalues a person or group’s identity, and which may exclude those who are devalued from normal social interaction. Stigma and Deviant Identity Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  27. There are three main types of stigma: • physical including physical or mental impairments, • moral signs of flawed character, or • tribal membership in a discredited or oppressed group. Stigma and Deviant Identity (cont’d) Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  28. One strategy analyzed by Goffman that stigmatized individuals use to negotiate everyday interaction is called passing, or concealing the stigmatizing information. • Provide Examples Managing Stigma Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  29. Others have what Goffman called an in-group orientation, where stigmatized individuals follow an orientation away from mainstream society and toward new standards that value their group identity. • Provide Examples Managing Stigma (Cont’d) Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  30. Finally, others choose deviance avowal, a process by which an individual self-identifies as deviant and initiates his or her own labeling process. • Provide Examples Managing Stigma (Cont’d) Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  31. Body modification that would be considered deviant in one culture is the norm in others

  32. Crime is the violation of a norm that has been codified into law. • Violent crime is a crime in which violence is either the objective or the means to an end, including murder, rape, aggravated assault, and robbery. Crime and Punishment Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  33. Violent Crime: Total U.S. Violent Crime Rate, 1960–2008 Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  34. Property crime is crime that does not involve violence, including burglary, larceny theft, motor vehicle theft, and arson. • White-collar crime is crime committed by a high status individual in the course of her or his occupation. Crime and Punishment (cont’d) Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  35. Property Crime Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  36. In the United States the Uniform Crime Report (UCR), an official measure of crime collected and published by the FBI, allows sociologists to study the relationship between crime and demographics like class, age, gender, and race. Crime and Punishment (cont’d) Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  37. National Recidivism Rates for Prisoners Releasedin 1983 and 1994 Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  38. There is an ongoing debate about the role of punishment in the criminal justice system, a collection of social institutions (legislatures, police, courts, and prisons) that create and enforce laws. Crime and Punishment (cont’d) Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  39. Deterrence is an approach to punishment that relies on the threat of harsh penalties to discourage people from committing crimes. • Retribution is an approach to punishment that emphasizes retaliation or revenge for the crime as the appropriate goal. Different Approaches to Punishment Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  40. Incapacitation is an approach to punishment that seeks to protect society from criminals by imprisoning or executing them. • Finally, rehabilitation is an approach to punishment that attempts to reform criminals as part of their penalty. Different Approaches to Punishment (Cont’d) Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

  41. Deviance is the flip side of the same coin as conformity • We all conform and deviate. • We mostly conform. • Deviance is relative • Since norms are defined mostly by those in power departing from the norms they’ve established is a process of social control. • Therefore politics pervades discussions of deviance. Take Away Points: Introduction to Sociology: Deviance and Conformity

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