Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

17
Psychology 12 ATTITUDE Formation

description

Psychology 12

Transcript of Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

Page 1: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

Psychology 12

ATTITUDE Formation

Page 2: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

DefinitionsWhat are attitudes?

Page 3: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

How do attitudes develop?

Page 4: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

Consistency?How often do we display the same attitude

to the same object, idea, or situation?

Page 5: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

What's it like?

Video was not exported from SlideRocket

Page 6: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

What do you think?

Attitudes develop based on how we evaluate

something. We can only determine someone holds an attitude about anything

until he/she responds “evaluatively” to an Attitude Object (AO).

Page 7: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

Attitude is a general and enduring positive or negative feeling about some person,

object, or issue.

Page 8: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

Video was not exported from SlideRocket

American History X

Page 9: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

Attitudes refer to very general

evaluations that people

hold of themselves, other people, objects, and

issues.

Page 10: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

1] Cognitive – beliefs about what is or is not true with respect to the AO.

2] Affective – feelings / emotions toward the AO.

3] Behavioral – tendencies to do certain things with respect to the AO.

Eg. Drinking and Driving

The three Components of Attitude

Page 11: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

Rick Mercer Rant

Video was not exported from SlideRocket

Page 12: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

Habits (I wake up every morning and I feel angry!)

Values (beliefs that we held dear);

“You know what Maria… once I would like to wake up and find these dishes in the cabinet!”

Beliefs (They are assumptions, theories, explanations, conclusions and states of mind)

Opinions (a person's ideas and thoughts towards something)

Attitudes aren't ....

Page 13: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

Both influence behavior

Habits are routine behaviors that are performed without evaluation of the behaviors’ consequences or the behavior itself

Attitudes are persistent evaluations

Attitudes & Habits

Page 14: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

Rick Mercer Rant

Video was not exported from SlideRocket

Page 15: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

Both are evaluations

Although, saying that somebody values the dishes being placed in the cabinet after they have been washed is similar with saying that somebody has a positive attitude of the dishes being placed in the cabinet after they have been washed

Values are ideal, desirable goals - more global/general than attitudes

Values can encompass several attitudes – i.e., one can have several attitudes towards certain values

Attitudes & Values

Page 16: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

Rick Mercer Rant

Video was not exported from SlideRocket

Page 17: Psychology 12 __outcome_3_1_attitude_formation

Beliefs are propositions about the attributes (“that car salesman”) of objects (e.g., “will say anything to make a sale”)

Beliefs are primarily cognitive – they do not generally lead directly to an action

Difficult to distinguish attitudes from beliefs when a belief ascribes a positive or negative attribute to an object

Attitudes & Beliefs