Social Psychology
Statement of the learner intends to research
What I would like to be informed about regarding social psychology is all the ways and applications in which this concept can be understood and applied. Not just in scholarly situations but in every-day activities, among friends, at work, or in social situation. Having a good understanding of any aspect of psychology for a student (or any alert person) in these times is helpful and the pursuit of that understanding brings insight and knowledge.
What the learner hypothesizes vis-a-vis what he may discover in the literature
The discoveries that are available in the literature are going to be fun to explore, and I have a clue that they will relate to human behavior from a scientific perspective. I would imagine those scholarly journals will likely relate to leadership, to social behaviors from the perspective of individuals and from the perspective of a group, why certain people act the way they do and how people respond to mean spirited situations, how prejudice and bias play a role in social behavior, and other psychological aspects of social behaviors.
This field is always interesting to me, because every new thing that is learned in a psychology context either reminds me of some situation I've been in, or reminds me of someone I have known, or simply points out why humans behave the way they do.
Review of current literature on social psychology
Kendra Cherry explains that social psychology is not just about reviewing social influences, but rather perceptions in a social setting, and the dynamics of social interaction are also part of this field of study (Cherry, 2008). Cherry's narrative in about.com (owned by The New York Times) explains that social psychology didn't really become a field of research until after World War II. "The horrors of the Holocaust" provided the impetus for researchers to give time to the study of "social influences" (conformity and obedience), Cherry writes. The range of topics to be covered in social psychology include leadership, nonverbal behavior (i.e., body language), conformity, aggression and prejudice, Cherry continues.
How is it different from other disciplines? Cherry notes that social psychology is often confused with "folk wisdom, personality psychology and sociology"; but unlike folk wisdom, social psychology embraces "…scientific methods and the empirical study of social phenomena" (p. 1). Folk wisdom, on the other hand, relies mostly on "anecdotal observations and subjective interpretation"; and personality psychology zeros in on "individual traits, characteristics and thoughts" but social psychology is concerned with "situations," Cherry continues (p. 1).
What social psychologists are mainly interested in exploring is the "impact that the social environment and group interactions have on attitudes and behaviors" (Cherry, p. 1). Moreover, sociology looks at social behavior from a "broad-based level" and sociologists are engaged in research on the cultural and institutional influences that explain human behavior (Cherry, p. 1). But psychologists are interested in "situational variables that affect social behavior," which entails looking at the topics sociologists look at but from a different perspective (Cherry, p. 1).
Meanwhile professor Hunter Gehlbach (Harvard Graduate School of Education) writes in the journal Educational Psychological Review that there are "scores of empirically grounded, fundamental principles" connected to the study of social psychology (Gehlbach, 2010, p. 349). The problem is many if not most of the principles that social psychologists have "amassed" have yet to be brought into the classroom, Gehlbach asserts (349). Hence, the author insists that these principles should be and could be infused into learning environments; and when they are incorporated into instructors' repertoires, they will have the potential to do several important things: a) they hold "untapped potential to improve pedagogy"; b) these principles have the ability to "motivate students"; and c) the principles that are already available to professors and instructors have the "…capacity to enrich students' understanding of subject matter" (Gehlbach, 349).
Gehlbach takes an interesting route to informing readers about...
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