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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
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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.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: 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.

Warm up!

1. Stand up2. Shake the hand of the

person next to you3. Sit down4. Clap your hands together

five times5. Moo like a cow

Page 2: 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.

Learning Objectives

•define the key term: obedience

•describe Milgram’s (1963) research study

Page 3: 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.

What is obedience?

Definition

Obedience is a type of social influence which causes a person to act in response to an order given by another person. The person who gives the order usually has power or authority.

Page 4: 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.

How far would you go to obey orders?

Page 5: 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.

How far would you go to obey orders?

Page 6: 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.

Context

• The Nazi extermination policy toward the Jews began in 1941 when special mobile killing units began lining up and shooting Jews in mass graves

• 12,000 Jews were killed daily• On 11 April 1961, the trial of Adolf

Eichmann, a Nazi soldier in World War II, began

• He was widely regarded as thearchitect of the Holocaust

Page 7: 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.
Page 8: 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.

Milgram (1963) Research Study

The maximum number of shocks that could be delivered to a “learner” was 30, starting at 15 Volts and going up to 450 Volts in 15-Volt increments..

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XpIzju84v24&feature=related

“The Germans are different!’

Page 9: 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.

How many participants, out of a total of 40, do you think delivered the maximum 450-Volt

shock, which was labelled XXX?

Page 10: 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.

Conclusions• Demonstrates ordinary people can be very obedient to

authority, even when asked to do in humane (bad) things.

• This shows people are not necessary evil, but ordinary people can carry out evil acts when pressured to obey.

• Therefore it is more situational factors than dispositional (personality) factors.

Page 11: 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.

Variations of MILGRAM’S original study

Page 12: 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.

Proximity of the Victim (Increased proximity)

• Instead of the Teacher and learner in same room, the learner was placed in another room away from the teacher so the teacher could hear the protests of the learner, but could not see the learner.

Page 13: 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.

Lower •40%

Page 14: 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.

Physical force

• Teacher had to force learner’s hand onto the plate to receive electric shock

Page 15: 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.

Lower •30%

Page 16: 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.

Support

• Teacher given support from two other ‘teachers’ (who were actually confederates) who refuse to obey

Page 17: 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.

Lower •10%

Page 18: 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.

Reduced proximity

• Experimenter left the room and gave instructions to ‘teacher’ by telephone

Page 19: 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.

Lower•20.5%

Page 20: 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.

Getting someone else to do it!

• Teacher paired with confederate who threw the switches to give the shock

Page 21: 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.

Higher

•92.5%

Page 22: 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.

Original study

65% of participants continued to give shocks up to 450 volts

Page 23: 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.

Proximity of an authority figure• Teacher and experimenter in same room• Highers obedience rates as the teacher is always being

observed and therefore feeling pressure.

When the proximity changed and the experimenter left the room, several participants gave

Weaker shock levels despite telling the experimenter they were following the correct

Procedures! Ooommmmmmm…..

Page 24: 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.

Presence of Allies

• Teacher given support from two other ‘teachers’ (who were actually confederates) who refuse to obey.

• The participants then started following the ‘teachers’ who were confederates and also refused to obey, so they didn’t have to inflict anymore harm.

Page 25: 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.

Proximity of the Victim

• The learner was seated in another room, although the teacher could hear the learner (i.e, pain and screams when the shocks happened)

• Experimenter left the room and gave instructions to ‘teacher’ by telephone

• When they the learner and teacher where situated in the same room. The level of obedience dropped.

• As well as when they had to touch the learner and get them to put there hand on the shock plate, again the levels dropped.

Page 26: 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.

Increasing the teachers discretion

• Where in a change of variables. Milgram changed the orders and left the teachers to shock the participants at an electricity level of their discretion. (meaning they didn’t have to tell anyone)

• In this condition only 1 participant out of 40 went up to a fatal dose of electricity.

Page 27: 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.

What is obedience? (1 mark)

Briefly outline the difference between obedience and conformity. (2 marks)

What was the background motivation for Milgram’s work? (2 marks)

Outline the main findings from Milgrams study (4marks)

Draw three conclusions about obedience that you have learnt from Milgrams study of obedience. (6 marks)