attitudes vs.actions richard t. la piere. r ichard t. l a p iere (s eptember 5, 1899 – f ebruary...

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ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere

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Page 1: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS

Richard T. La Piere

Page 2: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

RİCHARD T. LA PİERE (SEPTEMBER 5, 1899 – FEBRUARY 2, 1986)

He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at Stanford University from 1929 to 1965.

LaPiere is best known for his 1934 article "Attitudes Versus Actions" that appeared in the journal Social Forces.

Page 3: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

PREJUDİCE is an unjustified or incorrect attitude

(usually negative) towards an individual based solely on the individual’s membership of a social group.

For example, a person may hold prejudiced views towards a certain race or gender etc. (e.g. sexist)

Page 4: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

Sexism

Page 5: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

DİSCRİMİNATİON the behavior or actions, usually negative,

towards an individual or group of people, especially on the basis of sex/race/social class, etc.

Page 6: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at
Page 7: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

AİMS OF THE RESEARCHLaPiere claimed to demonstrate the lack of

consistency between what people say and what actually do.

Will a person's attitude towards other races always be matched by their actions?

Page 8: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

METHOD

The derivation social attitudes are seldom more than a verbal response to a symbolic situation.

The most measures depend on verbal responses to questions about some verbally described, broad category such as 'an ethnic minority‘

LaPiere decided to investigate racial prejudice by observing the real behavior of hotel and restaurant personnel.

Page 9: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

The Chinese couple in his company were accommodated in the best hotel in a small town noted for its bigoted attitude towards Orientals.

Two months later LaPiere happened to be in this town again and had the idea of phoning the hotel and asking whether they would accommodate 'an important Chinese gentleman'.

The reply was an unequivocal 'No'.

Page 10: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

Sometimes the researchers were travel worn and dusty and sometimes they looked more presentable

They were received at 66 hotels, auto camps, and Tourist Homes, refused at one.

They were served in 184 restaurants and cafes throughout the USA.

LaPierre took detailed records on each occasion and judged that they received good service in 72 of them.

Page 11: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

The Chinese-Americans made the reservations or orders, but LaPiere had not told them the research aims, and instead invented a number of ruses to be absent at the vital moment.

In this way he attempted to ‘factor himself out’

LaPiere concluded that people responded more to appearance (condition of clothing, cleanliness,neatness, quality) rather than race.

Page 12: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

6 months later a questionnaire was sent out to every one of the establishments visited, asking “Will you accept members of the Chinese race as guests in your establishment?”. Out of 251, 128 replied. 92% said ‘no’ to the question.

In addition, the questionnaire was sent to hotels and restaurants other than those visited in the same areas.

The same negative answer was received.

Page 13: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

RESULT

As LaPiere had expected, there was no consistency between the symbolic attitudes (responses to the letter) and actual behavior.

The Chinese couple received courteous service in virtually every establishment, but responses to the letter were almost universally negative.

This study showed that our actions don't always match our intentions.

Page 14: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

Questinnaires were not good basis for predicting behavior.

Page 15: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

DİSCUSSİONThere is no control of the study

Requires Laboratory experimentation

Subjective evaluation

Page 16: ATTITUDES VS.ACTIONS Richard T. La Piere. R ICHARD T. L A P IERE (S EPTEMBER 5, 1899 – F EBRUARY 2, 1986)  He was a professor Emeritus of sociology at

There is no guarantee that the members of staff who replied to questionnaires (possibly management) were the same as the ones who served the guests

There was also no investigation into why people made the choices that they did e.g. when answering the questionnaire.