After this lesson, students should
- Be wary of underestimating the influence of context or circumstance on human behavior (their own and others'). E.g. Circumstance excuses my bad behavior more than it excuses the bad behavior of others.
- Be aware of the pressure to conform, in oneself and others, and the difficulty of resisting this pressure.
- Be able to sort situations by the difficulty of resisting conformity, according to:
- Number of people conforming
- Identification with the group
- Confidence that the group is mistaken
- Presence or absence of a dissenter
- Be aware of the pressure to obey authority, in oneself and others.
- Be able to sort situations by the difficulty of resisting obedience, according to:
- Perceived authority of the "authority" giving instructions
- Proximity of the authority
- Proximity of the "victim"
- Presence of another disobeying
- Availability or salience of alternative, disobedient behaviors
Additional Learning Goals
What follows are additional learning goals that we would like to include, but aren't deeply covered in this discussion's lesson plan. We would like to cover them if we had more time.
- Predict that people will engage in temporal discounting when making decisions between something now vs. something later. E.g. People make decisions based on how good they think the outcomes will be, not based on when those outcomes will happen.
- Be wary of their own temptation to excessive temporal discounting when making decisions, choosing immediate rewards over longer term benefits. E.g. If I choose to get something less good that I can get sooner, it's always because I need it sooner.
- Be aware and wary of status quo bias. E.g. The way things are is the best way for things to be. Keeping things the way they are is safer.
- Understand not to assume the status quo is necessarily stable, even if we don't try to change it. E.g. It is possible to keep things just the way they are, and that is the most stable and predictable approach.