ATTITUDES Flashcards

1
Q

What is an attitude?

A

a value aimed at an attitude object

- value or believe towards something

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2
Q

How are attitudes formed?

A
  • associating with others and picking up their opinions and values. this is called socialisation
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3
Q

What is the triadic model?

A
  • its how attitude was developed, it’s made of three parts:
  • the cognitive part
  • the affective part
  • the behavioural part
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4
Q

What is the cognitive part of the triadic model?

A
  • this is a belief
    such as the belief in the ability to win
  • the most deep rooted
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5
Q

What is the affective part of the triadic model?

A
  • relates to feeling and interpretation such as enjoyment.
  • feelings and emotions
  • e.g a player ENJOYS taking part in the training
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6
Q

What is the behavioural part of the triadic model?

A
  • the actions of the performer
  • actions and habits of the performer
  • e.g plays win match and turns unto training- shows good behavioural attitude
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7
Q

How do you motivate change in a performer’s attitude?

A
  • cognitive dissonance
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8
Q

What is cognitive dissonance?

A
  • coach puts pressure on one or more attitude components
  • performer becomes uneasy and is motivated to change
  • dissonance means to create conflict in thinking.
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9
Q

Give an example of cognitive dissonance?

A
  • player is given new information so that they begin to question their current attitudes and become motivated to change them
  • the coach might point out the benefits of a new form of exercise or training method which the performer shows a negative approach to.
    2. make the activity fun and enjoyable by using varied practice. more fun could change attitude
    3. use rewards as reinforcement
    4. cochleae could bring in a role model.
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10
Q

What is persuasion?

A
  • an effective communication to promote change.
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11
Q

How to change behaviour of a tennis player to train more often

A

Cognitive - believe in their skills and believe that training will help them train
Affective - feel that training is fun and helpful
Behaviour - train more regularly

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12
Q

How are attitudes formed due to Conditioning

A

Rewards will strengthen exciting attitudes & thus strengthen the intension to train

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13
Q

How are attitudes formed due to Socialisation / social learning

A

We learn from role model / parents. Media had become a powerful former of attitudes including negative = stereotyping

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14
Q

The two psychological theories about changing attitude

A

1) persuasion communication

2) cognitive dissonance

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15
Q

What factors affect persuasion communication

A

The persuader- the person attempting to change behaviour
The receiver - the wholes attitude needs to be changed
Quality of message

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16
Q

What should be characteristics of a persuader

A

1) high status in the eye of receiver
2) high credibility = their message can be trusted
3) high popularity = effective message transfer

17
Q

What are the pros and cons of persuasive communication and cognitive dissonance

A

Pro: allows you to understand negative behaviour and factors that would contribute to changing attitude, along with strategies.
Con: too simplistic as it doesn’t consider personality, motivation or whether they have a need for consistency