Types of Conformity (AQA A Level Psychology) : Revision Note
Compliance, identification & internalisation
One type of social influence in A Level Psychology is conformity
Conformity is a phenomenon which involves someone changing, adapting or taking on new behaviours in order to fit in with the group
Conformity could also be known as majority influence as people tend to want to conform to larger groups (safety in numbers)
Minority influence does happen but it is less common
Compliance
Compliance is a type of conformity which involves:
agreeing with or behaving like the group publicly but disagreeing with or having different opinions to the group privately, e.g.:
Eating only vegetarian food with a particular group of friends, but continuing to eat meat when the group is not present
Laughing at a joke which the person does not find funny (and may in fact find offensive) because everyone else is laughing
Compliance is the weakest type of conformity as it only involves surface and superficial change and it ceases when someone is not with the group
Identification
Identification is a type of conformity which involves:
temporarily adopting the habits or attitudes and behaviours of a group if someone values the group and wishes to be included in it
conforming to the expectations required of a specific social role (e.g. police officers, nurses, teachers)
Some examples of identification include:
Dressing in the same style as a group of people at college
Using similar verbal expressions and body language as a group of social influencers
Identification results in short-term change as the individual is still not completely in agreement with the group (if only in private)
Internalisation
Internalisation is a type of conformity which involves:
accepting and agreeing with the group publicly and privately
internalising the group's norms,e.g.:
Becoming wholly involved in the norms of a group, renouncing former beliefs (e.g. political, religious), possibly cutting ties with people from the past
Meeting a new group of people at college and changing personal styles, hobbies, attitudes etc. to align with the group
Internalisation is the strongest type of conformity, leading to long-term change
Examiner Tips and Tricks
You may be asked to identify a specific type of conformity from an example supplied in the exam question (AO2 - a 'stem' question).
Before you begin to write your answer either highlight or underline the examples from the stem that demonstrate that type of conformity: this will ensure that you do not forget to include reference to the stem in your response.
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