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Koca-Atabey, Müjde – Education as Change, 2020
This article aims to revisit the Stanford Prison Experiment (SPE) from the perspective of disability studies. The SPE is an issue that inevitably comes to light while teaching Social Psychology and how it contributes to a different course titled Psychological, Social and Cultural Aspects of Disabilities. The SPE presents a pioneering piece of…
Descriptors: Correctional Institutions, Institutionalized Persons, Social Psychology, Experiments
Griggs, Richard A. – Teaching of Psychology, 2017
Given the many older criticisms of Milgram's obedience study and the more damning recent criticisms based on analyses of materials available in the Milgram archives at Yale, this study has become a contentious classic. Yet, current social psychology textbooks present it as an uncontentious classic, with no coverage of the recent criticisms and…
Descriptors: Compliance (Psychology), Social Behavior, Social Psychology, Research
Braswell, Matthew – Teaching Sociology, 2014
Instructors frequently utilize breaching experiments in an attempt to "bring sociology to life." However, an uncritical embrace of breaching experiments obscures the complexity of their possible effects on participants and subjects. These experiments have real potential to inflict deleterious consequences on individuals and groups.…
Descriptors: Sociology, Experiments, Social Behavior, Behavior Standards
Zimbardo, Philip G. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
When he conducted the Stanford prison experiment, Philip G. Zimbardo wanted to know who would win--good people or an evil situation--when they were brought into direct confrontation. The situation won; humanity lost. Out the window went the moral upbringings of the young men involved in the experiment, as well as their middle-class civility. Power…
Descriptors: Universities, Experiments, Group Dynamics, Social Behavior