Attitudes
Stereotypes
Prejudice and discrimination
Obedience and conformity
Prosocial and antisocial behaviour
100

What is an attitude?

It is an evaluation a person makes about a person, object, group, event or issue.

100

What is social identity?

Sense of self in terms of group membership

100

Stereotypes, prejudice and discrimination are all under the category of -

social biases

100

Define conformity.

The changing of behaviour to align with those of a group due to real or implied pressure.

100

What is prosocial behaviour?

Voluntary actions that promote social acceptance and benefit society and its members

200

What is the name given to things that are the targets of judgement related to attitudes?

Attitude objects

200

What did Tajfel and Turner suggest about being part of a social group?

It allows people to feel a sense of social identity

It makes up part of your self-image and comes from belonging to social categories

200

What is prejudice?

Unjustified attitudes (feelings and thoughts) towards people of a particular group

200

Define obedience.

When we follow the commands of someone with authority, or the rules or laws of our society.

200

What is antisocial behaviour?

Behaviour that harms society and its members by intentionally violating the rights of others

300

How many types of attitudes are there?

Two - explicit and implicit

300

What are the two key terms in relation to the association of groups by an individual?

Ingroup and outgroup

300

Apply the Tripartite Model to stereotypes, prejudice and discrimination.

A = Prejudice

B = discrimination

C = stereotypes

300

We watched a clip where Sandy from Grease conforms. How does she do that?

She changes her style; changes hair and outfit; starts smoking a cigarette

300

Which is the most notorious example of antisocial behaviour we have studied in class?

Kitty Genovese's rape and murder

400

What is the difference between explicit and implicit attitudes?

Explicit = conscious; implicit = unconscious

400

What is a name of one of the movies we watched clips for in class that show social identity theory?

Pitch Perfect; Mean Girls; The Breakfast Club

400

How is discrimination different but connected to prejudice?

Discrimination is seen as the action or behavioural component of a prejudiced attitude

400

Name 3 of the 6 factors affecting conformity.

Normative and informational influence

Culture

Group size

Unanimity

Deindividuation

Social loafing

400

What are the two main factors influencing prosocial behaviour?

Reciprocity norm and social responsibility

500

What is the name of the model we use to describe an attitude?

Tripartite Model 

500

What is attribution theory?

Process of attaching meaning to our behaviour or the behaviour of others by looking for causes to explain behaviour

500

Give an example of a clip we watched in class where prejudice and/or discrimination was evident.

Shrek; Lion King 2; The Daily Show

500

What historical event was Milgram influenced by or interested in investigating?

Eichmann and his behaviour during WWII and the Holocaust

500

What key idea is evident in the reciprocity norm?

Altruism

600

What are the three components of attitude that interrelate?

Affective, Behaviour, Cognitive/cognition

600

What are the two types attribution theory?

Situational and dispositional

600

True or false: prejudice always leads to discrimination

False

600

What study assessed conformity?

Asch's line judgement task

600

Which experiment did we looked at for antisocial behaviour? Include the experimenter names.

Smoky Room Experiment by Latane and Darley
700

What is Festinger's theory about?

Cognitive dissonance

700

Define stereotypes.

An oversimplified belief about an outgroup pertaining to either positive or negative thoughts about its members

700

What are the two types of discrimination?

Direct and indirect

700

Which study focused on assessing obedience?

Milgram's shock administration study

700

What is the diffusion of responsibility?

A reduction in personal responsibility when in a group resulting in an individual being less likely to act
800

Explain cognitive dissonance.

When the behaviour someone exhibits clashes with their thoughts/feelings about something

800

What are the three cognitive stages in determining who is part of an ingroup or outgroup?

Social categorisation, social identification and social comparison

800

What is the difference between the two types of discrimination?

Direct is intentional; indirect is unintentional (at times)

800

What was one of Milgram's main findings?

65% of participants followed orders all the way through

14 participants refused

A minimum of 300 volts was administered

800

What are the four main factors influencing antisocial behaviour?

Bystander effect, audience inhibition, diffusion of responsibility and cost-benefit analysis

900

What was the aim of the study "cognitive consequences of forced compliance"?

To investigate whether making people perform a dull task would create cognitive dissonance through forced compliance

900

What is the key term that defines out we use our patterns of thought about people to be able to quickly process large amounts of information?

Cognitive schemata

900

What are the three causes of prejudice?

Social influence, intergroup competition and just-world phenomenon 

900

What are the two types of social loafing?

Sucker effect and free-rider effect

900

What is groupthink? Provide an example.

Group members conform to make unanimous decisions without using critical thinking e.g., a cult

1000

What was a key finding of the forced compliance and cognitive dissonance study?

That the greater the money offered, the less cognitive dissonance experienced as the money was justification enough to lie

Negative relationship between amount of money offered, and the amount of attitude change required

1000

Why is there thought to be an element of bias in human behaviour relating to attribution theory?

People tend to create situational attributions for their own behaviours, but dispositional attributions for others.

1000

What are the three key elements to reducing prejudice?

Superordinate goals, mutual interdependence and equal-status contact

1000

What are the two types of cultures that come under the 'culture' aspect of conformity?

Individualistic and collectivist

1000

What is the key component to defining bullying?

It is purposeful and repeated behaviour

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