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Deindividuation

Exploring how groups influence individual identity and behavior.
Introduction

Lesson Overview

OBJECTIVES

Define the concept and explain its key psychological features, causes and symptoms

Identify its origins and associated key researchers

Apply the concept to group behavior in both historical and modern contexts

The Hook

STARTER QUESTIONS
Display a blank version of Canva post with JUST the title: https://www.canva.com/design/DAHANmf-IPk/ObovEibGvPaPXXnDTO0nSQ/edit?utm_content=DAHANmf-IPk&utm_campaign=designshare&utm_medium=link2&utm_source=sharebutton

Have students write responses to the following questions:

What do you believe happens to behavior when people feel anonymous?

Why or why not do people behave differently in public vs. in private settings?

Does being in a group make people feel more or less responsible for their actions?

Collect responses and let students share before continuing.

1
Phase 01

Phase 01: Concept Introduction & Origins

Teacher Mini-Lesson

CONCEPT INTRODUCTION
Now display the original Canva poster with its previously provided content: https://www.canva.com/design/DAHANmf-IPk/ObovEibGvPaPXXnDTO0nSQ/edit?utm_content=DAHANmf-IPk&utm_campaign=designshare&utm_medium=link2&utm_source=sharebutton

Introduce deindividuation using your DEFINITION:

Term: APA Dictionary of Psychology: “An experiential state characterized by loss of self-awareness, altered perceptions, and a reduction of inner restraints that results in the performance of unusual and sometimes antisocial behavior.”

Ask:

What stands out most in this definition?

Why do any of the listed characterizations matter so much for behavior?

Teacher Mini-Lesson

ORIGINS OF DEINDIVIDUATION
*Using the Origins section of the Canva poster:

* Gustave Le Bon (1895): first observed deindividuation in crowd behavior, suggesting that individuals lose personal identity in masses

Festinger, Pepitone, & Newcomb (1952): coined the term deindividuation, linking group anonymity to reduced self-restraint and awareness

Philip Zimbardo (1973): popularized the concept through the Stanford Prison Experiment, showing how roles, uniforms and anonymity can rapidly alter behavior

Discussion Question

Why do you think early psychologists were so interested in crowd behavior?
Compare OR contrast crowds in the 1800s to ones in the present

2
Phase 02

Phase 02: Causes & Symptoms

CAUSES + SYMPTOMS OF DEINDIVIDUATION

Display the “Causes” slide and review together:

Sensory overload

Reduced self-awareness

Emotional arousal

Diffusion of responsibility

Anonymity

Decreased self-evaluation

Group size

Uniformity

Display the “Symptoms” slide and review together:

Reduced guilt or shame

Impulsive behavior

Conformity to group norms

Increased aggression or antisocial behavior

Discussion Question

Which causes seem most powerful?
Which symptoms seem most significant in day-to-day life?

3
Phase 03

Phase 03: Main Activity

Student Activity Block

ACTIVITY #1: MASKED DECISION-MAKING ACTIVITY (Causes, More Active)

Divide students into small groups

Each group receives a moral or social decision as a short scenario

An ‘online’ comment on a crazy picture (modern)

How they would ‘protest’ on a controversial topic (combo)

What ‘expected’ meal etiquette looks like (historical)

Students must answer accordingly to their applicable prompt

ROUND 1: students respond individually and anonymously

ROUND 2: students discuss together and submit a collective answer

After this, compare and contrast the differences between individual and group decisions.

Student Activity Block

ACTIVITY #2: OBSERVED SCENARIO ANALYSIS (Symptoms, Less Active)

Show short video clips or describe crowd-involved scenarios (i.e., sports riots, internet trolling, historical mobs)
Have students identify which deindividuation elements are present per example

Lesson Finale

Exit Ticket

Discussion Question

HISTORY & REAL-WORLD CONNECTION
Direct students to apply deindividuation to history context:
* Can deindividuation explain behavior during revolutions or major movements?
* How do uniforms or anonymity shape historical events?
* In what way did deindividuation elaborate on group-committed atrocities?

Discussion Question

FINAL REFLECTION
Below, BRIEFLY SCAN at least one of the provided resources and refer to it in a 1-2 paragraph response

ACADEMIC/PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORY:

Zimbardo, P.G. (1969). The Human Choice
Individuation, Reason, and Order Versus Deindividuation, Impulse, and Chaos.

Explores how anonymity and reduced self-awareness influence behavior. Forms the modern foundation for deindividuation theory.

HISTORICAL APPLICATION

Browning, C.R. (1992). Ordinary Men
Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland.

Exhibits how initially ordinary individuals can engage in extreme behavior when operating within groups. Due to deindividuation, conformity, and responsibility diffusion.

MODERN/DIGITAL CONTEXT
Suler, J. (2004). The Online Disinhibition Effect.
A direct connection to deindividuation and online anonymity. Highly relevant to students’ present-day digital experiences and social behavior.

Respond to the following questions:

Note: no need to formally cite readings/references. Simply stating author/study/concept and elaborating on its connection will suffice.

Discussion Question

How did today’s lesson help or heighten your understanding of how people behave in group settings?
What is one cause or symptom of deindividuation that stood out to you? Why?

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