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Published byAntonia Peters Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 5
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Social groups: important for survival As infants, we would die if it weren’t for “family groups” As adults, we need even more!
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Sherif took 12-yr-old boys to summer camp. ½ given a cabin & named Eagles, ½ given cabin & named Rattlers Had own paraphernalia & played competitive games won knives, etc. At first, everyone friendly, but then…
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They became fierce competitors! Calling each other names, raiding cabins, fighting, etc.
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IN-GROUPSOUT-GROUPS Boys strongly tied to their group Used symbols to identify themselves (names, slogans, dress, badges) View themselves in positive stereotypes Inclined to compete w/out-group Boys that were not a member of that group Out-groups stereotyped in a negative way All showed how easily loyalty turns into hostility & aggression with competition
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Competition does strengthen unity Sherif made camp’s only water tank break down & called on all boys to fix it As they worked together, the cooperation eroded the hostility
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AKA: Reference Groups – group used as a frame of reference for evaluating one’s own behavior (ex. = gangs) Gangs evaluate themselves based on standards they’ve created & agree on – like a mugging or raping Called normative effect – aka a norm
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Opposite of this, also have comparison effects & associative effects – comparing yourself & your success to others Leads to negative feelings
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Instrumental leaders - achieve group’s goal by getting others to focus on task performance (“the go-getters”) Expressive leaders – achieve group harmony by making others feel good; value partnership over leadership Laissez-faire leaders – “let do”; lets others do their work more or less on their own
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Instrumental – effective, but rubs people the wrong way; least liked, most effective Expressive – most liked, less effective Laissez-faire – assumes if people are left alone, then will perform well. Reality = offers no social support; well liked, least effective
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As leader, you are given privileges that allow you to deviate from group’s norm = idiosyncrasy credit You must conform to the group’s changing ways, or will be forced out
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Members of a cohesive group maintain census to extent of ignoring the truth Pressure to conform can lead to disastrous consequences DIVERSITY helps to avoid groupthink However, groups naturally develop social networks – webs of social relationships
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Formal Organizations – secondary groups whose activities are rationally designed to achieve specific goals (like teacher/student) Key to increase productivity is through Informal Organizations – group formed based on personal interactions
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Bureaucracy – organization that’s rational in achieving it’s goal efficiently (Max Weber); most efficient form of organization Rationalization – process of replacing subjective, informal, or diverse ways of doing things with a planned, objective, unified method; based on abstract rules
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1. Rules & regulations – based on what’s known, not what’s anticipated 2. Grows unnecessarily larger! Called Parkinson’s Law = work expands to fill time available for its completion to appear busy Start to feel overworked, want bigger salary, more perks & incentives until you reach your “dead point” of retirement = PETER PRINCIPLE
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