FINALIZE MYTHBUSTING Score Worksheets. SECRETS OF THE PSYCHICS Correct Worksheets.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Social psychology Concerned with how others influence the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors of the individual Social thinking When something unexpected.
Advertisements

The perils of obedience
Warm up! 1.Stand up 2.Shake the hand of the person next to you 3.Sit down 4.Clap your hands together five times 5.Moo like a cow.
Conformity How similar are we to sheep and lemmings?
Stanley Milgram A lesson in obeying. How far do you think people will go in the name of obedience?
The Psychology of Evil How far will people go in the name of obedience?
Stanley Milgrim’s experiment
Critical Thinking.
OBJECTIVE 6: STUDENTS WILL DEMONSTRATE UNDERSTANDING BY EXPLAINING EXPERIMENTATION METHODS EXPERIMENTS.
Chapter 10 Social Psychology Title: Obey at Any Cost Author: S. Milgram (1963). Presented by Kelley Reinhardt May 5, 2004.
1 Obedience zObedience ycompliance of person is due to perceived authority of asker yrequest is perceived as a command zMilgram interested in unquestioning.
Social Psychology Lecture 14 Obedience and deindividuation Jane Clarbour Room: PS/B007 jc129.
Obedience to Authority. What Makes People Obey Authority? Why do you do what I tell you to do? Why do you do what I tell you to do? Who else do you obey?
Obedience to Authority: The Stanley Milgram Experiments Mr. Koch AP Psychology Forest Lake High School Obedience = changing behavior in response to a demand.
Myth #1 – What Are the Take-Aways? Common Sense, Intuition, and Snap Judgments are more of a reflection of what has happened and has been researched then.
Helen Harton, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology University of Northern Iowa.
Understanding Ethics in Psychology
Using the Scientific Method
Obedience Why do we obey?. Why do we obey orders that we know are immoral or wrong? Germans who helped kill Jews in Europe. Serbs who killed Muslims in.
The Milgram Experiment. The Milgram Experiment was a series of social psychology experiments conducted in the early 1960s by Yale University psychologist.
Social Psychology.
The Milgram Obedience Experiment The Perils of Obedience "The social psychology of this century reveals a major lesson: often it is not so much the kind.
Experimental Psychology PSY 433 Chapter 13 Social Psychology.
“Ordinary People” Doing Evil
Can people be forced to do something against their will? Have you ever? How?
Research Methods: Thinking Critically with Psychological Science.
Conformity and Obedience. CONFORMITY “ The tendency to change our perceptions, opinions, or behaviour in ways that are consistent with group norms” (Brehm,
Excavating Human Behaviors.  Pretend you are a Psychologist and briefly describe how you would study the following:  1. The life & culture of the “urban.
THE MILGRAM EXPERIMENT
CHAPTER 4 – RESEARCH METHODS Psychology 110. How Do We Know What We Know? You can know something because a friend told you You can know something because.
MILGRAM’S EXPERIMENT A STUDY IN OBEDIENCE
Social Psychology Norms Conformity Obedience Prejudice Altruism.
AICE.Milgram.
Adolf Eichmann. What is this man famous for? What do you think we will be looking at this lesson?
A Scientific Approach to Psychology Science is more than collecting facts; it is an attitude and a way of thinking. All scientific study begins with a.
Introduction to Psychology Social Psychology Prof. Jan Lauwereyns
Chapter 1: Thinking Critically With Psychological Science 1.
3 The Influence of Other People on Attitudes and Behaviour GV917.
ADAPTED FROM SIMPLYPSYCHOLOGY The Milgram Experiment.
Obedience Obedience compliance of person is due to perceived authority of asker request is perceived as a command Milgram interested in unquestioning obedience.
AS level Psychology The core studies The Social Approach.
© POSbase 2005 Milgram (1965)Milgram (1965) followed up the famous study on obedience to authority (Milgram, 1963).Milgram, 1963 He examined the influence.
Obedience.
Milgram, obedience & environmental determinism
Milgram (1963)’The behavioural study of obedience’
Conformity and Obedience Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Social Psychology by David G. Myers 9 th Edition Conformity and Obedience.
Stanley Milgram 1962, In Milgram’s Own Words What was Milgram’s motive for studying obedience to authority?
How Do Others Affect the Individual?
What is obedience? Lesson 2 – Social Learning Unit 2 – Understanding other people.
Groups & Obedience The Milgram Experiment
Experimental Psychology PSY 433 Chapter 13 Social Psychology.
The MILGRAM Experiment Molly Marshall. Milgram's Question... Why do we obey authority? What conditions foster obedience? What conditions foster independent.
The Psychology of Evil How far will people go in the name of obedience?
Milgram A behavioural study of obedience (1963). Obedience What do you think is meant by the term obedience? What do you think is meant by the term obedience?
Conformity. Results Even though the correct answer was always obvious, the average subject conformed to the group response on 32% of the trials and 74%
Rewind Finalize Mythbusting – 7th Period Begin Myth 2
MILGRAM’S EXPERIMENT A STUDY IN OBEDIENCE
Milgram Experiment.
MODULE 2 Myers’ Exploring Psychology 5th Ed.
September 26 Rewind Schedule/Tests/Grades
Bellwork On a sheet of paper, write out a step by step description of Milgram’s experimental design.
Groups & Obedience The Milgram Experiment
Experimental Psychology PSY 433
The Milgram Experiment
Obedience to Authority: The Stanley Milgram Experiments
INTRODUCTION TO RESEARCH
Obedience Obedience compliance of person is due to perceived authority of asker request is perceived as a command Milgram interested in unquestioning obedience.
Milgram (1963)’The behavioural study of obedience’
Component 2: Psychological themes through core studies
Presentation transcript:

FINALIZE MYTHBUSTING Score Worksheets

SECRETS OF THE PSYCHICS Correct Worksheets

COMMON SENSE TEST True or False?

MYTH #2 – NOTES GUIDE 1. Do you think there’s truth to the statement, “Psychology is just common sense”? Explain. Let’s look at some research (half-sheet).

WHAT IS PSYCHOLOGY? Myth #2: Psychology is Just Common Sense.

Myth #2 “Of course that’s true!” “Why do people even waste their time researching stuff that’s just common sense?!” Let’s look at some research…

Can They Both Be True?

2.Attraction… What does research say? University of Iowa People tend to marry those who are similar in attitudes, religion, and values. It appears that similarity in personality that appears to be more important in having a happy marriage.

Hindsight Bias Sometimes just asking people how and why they felt or acted as they did can sometimes be misleading. 3.Common sense describes what HAS happened, not what WILL happen. “I knew it all along phenomenon” 4.*The tendency to believe, after learning an outcome, that one would have foreseen it.

“Hindsight is 20/20” Hurricane Katrina (2005)

Michael Brown, former Federal Emergency Management Agency director, recalled his feelings from the day before Katrina hit: “I knew in my gut this was the bad one”

The Limits of Common Sense Just because something seems like it should be true does not necessarily mean it is. 7.Psychomythology:misconceptions, urban legends, mythology, and misinformation about psychology Psychology: the scientific STUDY of mental processes and behavior Researchers take some of our guesses about human behavior and test them scientifically. Would you deliver potentially fatal shocks to a stranger just because an authority figure told you to? What does your common sense tell you? How did you answer #4 on the common sense test?

Obedience to authority How far will we go to follow the orders of an authority figure? Stanley Milgram One of the most famous and widely recognized psychological studies (Yale University; 1963). Raised the ethics of using humans in research. Wanted to understand WWII atrocities.

7.Methods Imagine you and another participant arrive at a laboratory for an experiment called "The Effects of Punishment on Learning." After being greeted by an experimenter, he randomly assigns you to be the "teacher" and the other participant to be the "learner." The learner is led to another room and hooked up to a shock machine.

Mr. Wallace

Methods The teacher reads a list of word pairs (Example: “clear” goes with “air.”). If the answer is wrong, the learner receives a shock. With each mistake, you move to the next lever administering a more intense shock (begins at 15 volts, increases by 15v each lever to 450v). How far would you go? – Select a measure and write it on your paper.

The procedure Voltage Learner response Experimenter response 75 grunts 1. Please continue 120 shouts in pain 2. The experiment requires you to continue. 150 says he refuses to continue 3. It is absolutely essential that you continue. 200 blood-curdling screams 4. You have no other choice but to continue. 300 refuses to answer, heart condition 330+ silence

What would you do? 6.The manipulated variable: authority (IV) The response in presence of IV: shock or not 7.Prediction/Hypothesis: Average estimate was 1.2% of subjects would go all the way to 450 volts (truly sadistic people) Most would stop obeying authority around 135 volts. *What did you say you would do? 8. Results: 26 out of 40 (65%) went to 450 volts. The “learner” is a confederate of the experimenter. Everything is scripted.

Voltage Learner response Experimenter response 75 grunts 1. Please continue 120 shouts in pain 2. The experiment requires you to continue. 150 says he refuses to continue 3. It is absolutely essential that you continue. 200 blood-curdling scream 4. You have no other choice but to continue. 300 refuses to answer, heart condition 330+ silence

9. Factors Influencing Obedience

Was the original hypothesis based on “common sense”?

Obedience, now & then… ABC News: “What would you do?” Replication of Milgram’s research Were the results similar? Again … Are our expectations about human behavior “common sense” or is it more complicated than that?

Obedience, now & then… ABC News: “Would you obey a total stranger and steal a baby?”

Myth #2 – What Are the Take-Aways? Common Sense, Intuition, and Snap Judgments are more of a reflection of what has happened and has been researched then what will happen. Thus, MISTRUST your “common sense” when you hear something or read something about Psychology. Find research EVIDENCE to support claims. Don’t buy into something just because it says “studies show.” Science can be and often IS “uncommon” sense – it requires us to put aside our personal bias and belief systems and focus primarily on EVIDENCE! Think about those “experts” and their predictions for Milgrim’s research. Think about your assumptions about whether or not people would steal a baby.