Conformity to social roles as investigated by Zimbardo Flashcards
What is a social role?
The parts individuals play as members of a social group. With each social role you adopt, behaviour changes to fit the expectations you and others have of that role in that situation. Each social role carries expected behaviours called norms.
what are example of social roles
Student
Teacher
Customer
Son/daughter
what are social roles important for?
Individuals learn how to behave by looking at the social roles other people play in social situations and then conforming to them.
These learned social roles become like internal mental scripts (schema), allowing individuals to behave appropriately in different settings.
what does conformity to social roles involve
identification (stronger than compliance), involving both public and private acceptance of the behaviour and attitudes exhibited.
what is conformity not as strong as
But, conformity to social roles isn’t as strong as internalisation, as individuals adopt different social roles for different situations.
what does Zimbardo’s (1973) prison study illustrate
the role of social roles in conformity.
what did Zimbardo’s study attempt to do
to understand the brutal and dehumanising behaviour found in American prisons.
What two different explanations were explored
The Dispositional Hypothesis
The Situational Hypothesis
What is the situational Hypothese
Saw violence and degradation as a product of the prison environment.
What is a dispositional hypothesis
Proposed that the violence and degradation of prisons was due to the ‘nature’ of the people found within the prison system i.e. that both guards and prisoners had sadistic and aggressive characteristics.
what kind of behaviour would support the dispositional hypothesis
If no brutality occurred, this supports the dispositional hypothesis, because the individuals had no record of violence/criminal behaviour.
what kind of behaviour would support the situational hypothesis
if brutality was observed in the participants, this would support the situational hypothesis, because it would suggest that situational factors were driving normal, law-abiding people to such behaviour.
how did Zimbardo investigate this
To investigate this, Zimbardo built a mock prison and used ‘average’ people with no record of violence or criminality to play prisoners or guards.
what were the two aims of the study
1)To investigate the extent to which people would conform to the roles of guard and prisoner in a role-playing simulation of prison life.
2)To test the dispositional (i.e. prison violence due to sadistic personalities of guards) vs. situational (prison violence as due to the brutal conditions of the prison environment) hypotheses.
what was the procedure for the participants of Zimbardo’s study
75 male university students responded to a newspaper advertisement asking for volunteers for a study of prison life paying $15 a day.
21 students rated as the most physically and mentally stable, mature and free from anti-social and criminal tendencies were used.
Individuals were randomly chosen to play the role of guard or prisoner (10 guards; 11 prisoners).
Zimbardo played the role of prison superintendent.