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Høst 2019

PSY-3005 Attitudes - 10 stp


The course is administrated by

Institutt for psykologi

Type of course

This is an elective course on the Master`s program in Psychology. The course can also be taken as a singular course.

Course contents

Our attitudes toward objects, people, and ideas shape many aspects of everyday life, including our choice of consumer goods, friends, and political values. What are attitudes, how do they develop, how are they related to behavior, how can they be measured, and how can they be changed?  

Part I of the lecture presents traditional and contemporary approaches to the study of attitudes. This part deals with the definition of attitudes, their structure and function, their origin, and their consequences. The measurement of attitudes will be discussed; further, the most influential models of persuasion (that is, how to change peoples attitudes) will be presented.  

Part II deals with selected topics that have recently gained attention in the literature. First, new theoretical models of persuasive communication have been proposed that provide a fresh view on how attitudes are formed, and how they can be changed. These models will be presented and compared to the established approaches. Second, research has demonstrated the usefulness of complementing direct measures of attitudes (typically based on questionnaire responses) by indirect attitude measures (typically based on response latencies). These two kinds of measures may often lead to different conclusions, for instance in research on sensitive topics such as intergroup attitudes. Theoretical background and measurement instruments, but also ambiguities concerning the appropriate interpretation of indirectly assessed attitudes will be presented and discussed.


Application deadline

Applicants from Nordic countries: 1 June for the autumn semester and 1 December for the spring semester. Exchange students and Fulbright students: 1 October for the spring semester and 15 April for the autumn semester.

Admission requirements

Local admission, application code 9371 - singular courses.

Objective of the course

After completing the course the student should be able to:


Language of instruction

The course is held in English. The weekly assignments and the home exam may be written in English or Norwegian.

Teaching methods

24 hours of lectures and seminars, 2 hours each time. The classroom sessions will support the student's individual and independent work on the subject by giving an overview, pointing out connections, explaining core concepts and commenting on the reading list.

Assessment

Home exam. The student must write an academic essay (10 pages) on a subject in agreement with the teacher. The essay is graded A-F. A re-sit exam will be arranged for this course for students receiving an F on the exam.

Obligatory coursework requirements: 1) to hand in a half-page discussion paper on the literature for each session, on the day before the session (to be evaluated pass/fail by the course teacher), and (2) to give one 15-minute presentation to the class (to be evaluated pass/fail by the course teacher; the exact topic, literature, and presentation strategy shall be discussed and agreed with the course teacher beforehand). The coursework assignments must be approved/pass in order to take the final exam.


Date for examination

Take-home assignment hand in date 22.11.2019

The date for the exam can be changed. The final date will be announced at your faculty early in May and early in November.