Attitude Part 3
PART B
Attitude And Behaviour
It’s only natural to think a person’s attitudes and behaviors are directly related. If someone says, while truly believing it, that they’re not a racist, you’d expect them to behave consistently with that statement. Despite this, psychologists have found that the link between a person’s attitudes and their behaviors is not always that strong. In fact, people have a nasty habit of saying one thing then doing the opposite, even with the best of intentions.
You see it all the time. People say they’re worried about global warming and yet they drive around in a big gas guzzler. They say that money isn’t their God, yet they work all the hours. They say they want to be fit but they don’t do any exercise.
The discovery of the extent of people’s blatant hypocrisy goes back to 1930s America and the work of a Stanford sociology professor, Richard LaPiere. In the early 30s, he was on a tour across California with some close friends who happened to be Chinese. LaPiere was worried that they would encounter problems finding welcoming restaurants and hotels because of his Chinese friends. Out of the 128 restaurants and hotels they visited, all but one served them courteously. At that time in the US, there had been lots of stories in the media about how prejudiced people were against Chinese people. LaPiere and his friends were, therefore, pleasantly surprised to find that out of the 128 restaurants and hotels they visited, all but one served them courteously. Nowadays the fact that one place refused to serve them would rightly be considered an outrage – but those were different times.
So it sounds like a happy ending: perhaps the papers had just exaggerated people’s negative attitudes towards Chinese people? But when LaPiere got home he started to wonder why there was such a gap between what the newspapers were reporting about people’s attitudes and their actual behavior. To check this out he decided to send out a questionnaire to the restaurants and hotels they had visited along with other similar places in the area.
The questionnaire asked the owners about their attitudes, with the most important question being: “Will you accept members of the Chinese race in your establishment?” The answers they could give were:
- Yes.
- No.
- Depends upon the circumstances.
Incredibly 90% of respondents answered, no, they wouldn’t accept members of the Chinese race into their establishments. Incredibly 90% of respondents answered, no, they wouldn’t accept members of the Chinese race into their establishments. Imagine LaPiere’s surprise when he looked at the results. People genuinely did say one thing and do the complete reverse. They didn’t even select ‘it depends’. What on Earth was going on? LaPiere himself argued that the problem lay in the questionnaire. The questions themselves cannot represent reality in all its confusing glory. What probably happened when people were asked if they accept Chinese people was that they conjured up a highly prejudiced view of the Chinese which bore little relation with what they were presented within reality.
Here was a polite, well-dressed, well-off couple in the company of a Stanford University professor. Not the rude, job-stealing, yobbish stereotype they had in mind when they answered the questionnaire. This study has actually been subsequently criticized for all sorts of reasons. Nevertheless, it’s main finding – that people don’t do what they say they will in many situations – has been backed up by countless later studies, although in more sophisticated fashion. The question is: why?
It all depends on how you ask the questions. Many psychologists effectively agree with LaPiere that it all depends on how you ask the questions and what stereotypes people are currently imagining when they give their answers. In some ways an attitude is like a snapshot of the prejudices the respondent has available to memory just at the moment they are questioned. This has led to a whole raft of studies and theories searching for connections between people’s attitudes and their behavior. Many a lengthy time has been dedicated to explaining the divergence. Some of the factors that have been found important are:
- Social norms.
- Accessibility of the attitude.
- Perceived control over behavior.
Despite these findings, the picture is extremely complicated and frustratingly inconclusive. Perhaps as a result interest in this area has been waning amongst psychologists. The exact way in which people’s attitudes and behavior are connected remains a mystery. All we can say with certainty is that people are frequently extremely inconsistent.
How Attitudes Form, Change And Shape Our Behavior
What’s your opinion on the death penalty? Which political party does a better job of running the country? Should prayer be allowed in schools? Should violence on television be regulated? Chances are that you probably have fairly strong opinions on these and similar questions. You’ve developed attitudes about such issues, and these attitudes influence your beliefs as well as your behavior. Attitudes are an important topic of study within the field of social psychology. What exactly is an attitude? How does it develop? Continue reading to learn more about how psychologists define this concept, how attitudes influence our behavior and things we can do to change attitudes.
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