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CHAPTER 6  SOCIAL GROUPS   The clusters of people with whom we interact in our daily lives FORMAL ORGANIZATIONS  Huge corporations & other bureaucracies SOCIAL GROUPS     Two or more people who: Identify with one another And interact People with shared experiences, loyalties, and interests Social Groups Your Groups Not Groups   Not every collection of individuals forms a group Category: People who share a status     Women College Graduates Baptists Crowds: Loosely formed collection of people Category: Famous Artists (self-portraits) Category: Late Night Comedians Category: Brides Category: Serial Killers Crowd: Loosely formed collection of people Crowd  "A huge crowd gathers outside The New York Times building in Times Square to hear playby-play bulletins of the World Series between the Cleveland Indians and the Brooklyn Robins (Oct. 12, 1920)." Primary & Secondary Groups  Two types of social groups 1. PRIMARY GROUP:    Small social group Personal Lasting relationships 2. SECONDARY GROUP    Large Impersonal Pursue a specific goal or activity  Primary groups:  Personal  Spend time together  Tightly integrated  Group is an end in itself  View each other as unique & irreplaceable Primary Groups Families  Secondary Groups:  Goal Oriented  Weak emotional ties  Little personal knowledge  Do not think of themselves as “we” Secondary Groups Society: The Basics, 9th Edition by John Macionis Copyright © 2007 Prentice Hall, a division of Pearson Education. All rights reserved. Group Leadership  Important element of group dynamics  TWO LEADERSHIP ROLES 1. 2. Instrumental Leadership Expressive Leadership  1. Instrumental Leadership  Focus: Completion of tasks  Makes plans  Gives orders  Gets things done  2. Expressive Leadership  Focus: Group’s well-being  Personal ties  Minimizes tension & conflict  THREE LEADERSHIP STYLES 1) Authoritarian Leadership 2) Democratic Leadership 3) Laissez-faire Leadership 1. Authoritarian Leadership  Provides clear expectations for:  What needs to be done  When it should be done  How it should be done Authoritarian Leadership  Clear division between leader and followers  Group members obey orders  Little affection from the group  Appreciated in a crisis 2. Democratic Leadership  More expressive  Followers vote  Time consuming  Best when followers knowledgeable  Identify new ways to do things  Less successful in a crisis situation 3. Laissez-faire Leadership  “Hands-off¨ style  Provides little or no direction  Gives followers freedom & authority  Followers:  Determine goals  Make decisions  Resolve problems Laissez-faire Leadership  Effective style when followers are:  Highly skilled  Experienced  Educated  Trustworthy Group Conformity  Groups influence behavior of members  Change attitudes & beliefs  Identify legitimacy to lead (leader)  Member who fails to conform--loses credibility 10/30 Group Conformity Examples GROUPTHINK GROUPTHINK (Irving L. Janis)  Tendency of group members to conform  Resulting in a narrow view of an issue Example:  Challenger Space Shuttle disaster (1/28/86)  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AfnvFnzs91s Groupthink  Disregarded engineers’ concerns about faulty O-rings  Launched shuttle anyway GROUPTHINK (Irving L. Janis) Example Invasion of Iraq: War based on notion of disarming Iraq of WMDs Intelligence personnel perceived superiors wanted information confirming their suspicions--that's all they gathered GROUPTHINK (Irving L. Janis) Other Examples   Titanic sinking Jonestown massacre   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IY3cx3U0gYE&f eature=related Charles Manson Family   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOHJSFsJeIk&f eature=fvwrel http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cwqooUe0wC0 &feature=related (2002) Groupthink  Members have sense of invulnerability  Reluctant to:   Suggest alternatives  Be critical of each other's ideas  Express an unpopular opinion Desire for group cohesion hinders:    Critical thinking Good decision-making Problem solving Groupthink Happens When There Is:  A strong, persuasive group leader  A high level of group cohesion  Intense pressure from the outside to make a good decision Negative outcomes  Examine few alternatives  Not critical of each other's ideas  Do not seek expert opinions  Highly selective in gathering information  No contingency plans Symptoms of Groupthink  An illusion of invulnerability  Believing in the group's morality  Rationalizing poor decisions  Sharing stereotypes  Exercising direct pressure on others  Not expressing your true feelings  Maintaining an appearance of unanimity Solutions to Groupthink  Use subgroup that reports to larger group  Divide into groups & discuss differences  Use outside experts  Use a “Devil's advocate” to question ideas  Hold a "second-chance meeting" to offer one last opportunity to choose another course of action Reference Groups    Serve as a point of reference: In making evaluations and decisions Assessing our attitudes & behavior  Groups to which we belong  Groups to which we do not belong  Conforming to groups to which we do not belong is a strategy to win acceptance (used in marketing) Reference Groups In-Groups and Out-Groups  IN-GROUP   Respect and loyalty OUT-GROUP  Sense of competition or opposition In-Groups Source of pride and self-esteem  Sense of social identity  Enhance the status of the group  For example:  The U.S. is the best country in the world!  Out-Groups  Increase self-image by:  Discriminating against out-group  Being prejudice against out-group   For example: The British, French etc. are losers! Group Size   Influences interaction THE DYAD: Group with 2 members  More intense interaction than in larger groups  Unstable  If either person leaves, group disappears  THE TRIAD: Social group with 3 members  More stable than a dyad  Less intense interaction  Fewer personal attachments  More formal rules & regulations  Coalition formation  Power structure possible The Effects of Group Size on Relationships The Real World: An Introduction to Sociology, 2nd Edition Copyright © 2010 W.W. Norton & Company Networks  A web of weak social ties  Includes people we know of or who know of us  With whom we rarely interact Social Networks The Real World: An Introduction to Sociology, 2nd Edition Copyright © 2010 W.W. Norton & Company Social Networks Social Networks  Network ties may be weak, but powerful resource  People’s colleges, clubs, neighborhoods, political parties, and personal interests  “Privileged” networks are a valuable source of “social capital”  Ability to secure mutual benefits by membership in social networks Gendered Social Networks   Women’s ties not as powerful as typical “old boy” networks As gender equality increases  Male and female networks become more alike Formal Organizations  Large secondary groups organized to achieve goals efficiently  Impersonal  Formally planned atmosphere  Tasks of organizing members of U.S. society Types of Formal Organizations  Based on reasons people participate 1) Utilitarian Organizations 2) Normative Organizations 3) Coercive Organizations  1. UTILITARIAN ORGANIZATIONS Pays people for their efforts  Members: Almost everyone who works for income  Joining: Usually by choice   Examples:    Microsoft Bank of America Winthrop University  2. NORMATIVE ORGANIZATIONS  “Voluntary Organizations”  Join to pursue goals viewed as morally worthwhile  Examples:    Amnesty International Sierra Club Peace Corp  3. COERCIVE ORGANIZATIONS  Involuntary membership  Forced to join as a form of punishment or treatment  Isolate people to change attitudes and behaviors  Examples:   Prisons Psychiatric hospitals COMPARISON: SMALL GROUPS & FORMAL ORGANIZATIONS Society: The Basics, 9th Edition by John Macionis Copyright © 2007 Prentice Hall, a division of Pearson Education. All rights reserved. Theory in Everyday Life The Real World: An Introduction to Sociology, 2nd Edition Copyright © 2010 W.W. Norton & Company