Concept of Social Group

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    Social Groups

    Compiled by: Imran Ahmad Sajid

    [email protected]

    Key Book. Group Dynamics by Forsyth.

    I am cast upon a horrible, desolate island; void of all hope of recovery. I am singled out and

    separated, as it were, from allthe world, to be miserable. I am divided from mankind, a

    solitary; one banished from human society. I have no soul to speak to or to relieve me.

    Daniel Defoe,Robinson Crusoe

    With these words Robinson Crusoe, the hero in Defoes classic novel, laments his fate. The

    climate of his island is comfortable, the food plentiful, and the animals peaceful. He has seed

    for crops, tools for working, weapons to protect himself, and clothes to cover himself. But

    despite these comforts, he feels that fate has done him a great wrong, for he is no longer a

    member of any human group.

    Unlike unfortunate Crusoe most of us live out our lives in the midst of groups. Of the billions

    of people populating the world, all but an occasional hermit, outcast, or recluse belong to a

    group. In fact, since most of us belong to several groups, the number of groups in the world

    probably reaches well beyond 5 billion. Everywhere we turn, we encounter groups: airplane

    crews, audiences, choirs, clubs, committees, communes, dance troupes, families, fraternities,

    gangs, juries, orchestras, sororities, support groups, teams, and on and on. The world isliterally teeming with groups.

    Groups are a fundamental component in our social lives, but in some respects their

    pervasiveness prevents us from fully understanding them. In living most of our lives

    surrounded by groups, trying to get into groups, and trying to get out of groups, we can

    become so accustomed to theme that their influence on our behaviour goes unnoticed. We

    take our groups for granted, so much so that we must learn to look at them anew, from a

    different, more scientific perspective.

    The Nature of Groups

    The Impressionists. Art in 19th century France was dominated by the classicists, who

    favored paintings depicting mythological, religious, or historical scenes. But not all artists

    accepted the standards established by the classical school. In 1860 Claude Monet met Camille

    Pissaro, and the two spent long hours airing their radical views. Two years later Edourd

    Manet and Edgar Degas, both sons of wealthy families, joined Monet and Pissarro in their

    search for alternative forms of artistic expression. Later that year Monet met three other

    disillusioned young artists (Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Alfred Sisley, and Frederic Bazille) andpersuaded them to join the informal gathering.

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    Over the next few years these young artists worked together in developing a new approach to

    painting, often journeying out into the country side to paint landscapes. They sometimes

    painted side by side and patiently critiqued one anothers work. They also met regularly, each

    Thursday and Sunday, in a caf in Paris to discuss technique, subject matter, and artistic

    philosophies. For years their art was rejected by critics and they scarcely earned enoughmoney to survive, but by relying on one another for social support they were able to continue

    to develop the ideas. In time their approach was recognized by the art community as new

    school of paining and was labeled impressionism (Farrell, 1982).

    The Survivors. Piers Paul Read (1974) recounts the grim fate of the members of a rugby

    team who survived the crash of their chartered plane only to find themselves stranded in

    subzero temperatures high in the Andes Mountains. A lone individual would have certainly

    perished in the harsh climate, but by pooling their scant resources and skills, the group

    managed to survive. Each individual was responsible for performing certain tasks, including

    cleaning their sleeping quarters, tending to the injured, and melting drinking water. These

    activities were coordinated by the captain of the rugby team, but when he was killed in an

    avalanche much of the business of running the groups activities fell on the shou lders of a

    coalition of three cousins.

    The group lived for weeks by eating the bodies of those who had dies in the crash and

    avalanche, but when starvation seemed imminent they sent two men down the mountain to

    seek help. After walking 14 days and sleeping in the open at night, the two explorers

    managed to reach a small farm on the edge of the great mountain range. Their sudden

    appearance after 70 days was followed by an air-rescue operation that lifted the remaining 14

    from the crash-site. Those who had managed to stay alive later pointed out that it was their

    combined efforts which saved their lives (Read, 1974).

    The Peoples Temple. Jim Jones was a dynamic speaker who could hold an audience in

    rapt attention. In 1963 he formed his own church, the Peoples Temple Full Gospel Church.

    His persuasiveness influenced many, and his message reached out to the rich and poor, young

    and old, and educated and uneducated. The membership soon swelled to 8000, united in their

    acceptance of Joness political religious, and social teachings. Rumors of improprieties begancirculating, however. Former members reported that at some meetings those who had

    displeased Jones were severely beaten before the whole congregation, with microphones used

    to amplify their screams. Jones, some said, insisted on being called Father and he demanded

    absolute dedication and obedience from his followers. Many member donated all their

    property to the church, and one couple even turned over their 6-year-old son on demand.

    Jones eventually moved the group to Guyana, in South America, where he established

    Jonestwon. Press releases described the settlement as a utopian community, but rumors still

    circulated; was Jonestown more like a prison than a utopia? Relatives in the United States

    became concerned, and they convinced a member of Congress, Representative Leo Ryan, tovisit Jonestown. Joness followers attacked the group, and five people were killed, including

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    Ryan. When the assassins returned to tell Jones of their attack, he ordered his followers to

    take their own lives. Armed guards prevented all but a few from escaping, and Jones

    repeatedly told the members to accepttheir deaths with dignity. When authorities reached the

    settlement the next day, they were met by a scene of unbelievable ghastliness. On Joness

    orders more than 900 men, women, and children had killed themselves. Joness body wasfound near the throne from which he had directed mass suicide. Over the chair remained

    the motto Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it (Krause, 1978).

    The Rattlers and the Eagles. The 22 11-year-olds, all white and all boys, were camping

    near Robbers Cave State Park in Oklahoma. The boys were separated into two groupsthe

    Rattlers and the Eaglesbefore spending several days hiking, swimming, and playing sports.

    During that time friendship bonds, rules, and rituals blossomed within each group, along with

    an undercurrent of animosity toward the other group. When the two groups met in a series of

    competitive games, in almost no time tempers flared and full-fledged hostility broke out. The

    Eagles stole and burned the Rattlers makeshift team pennant. The Rattlers counterattacked

    that night by breaking into the Eagles cabin, and the following day fistfights and small

    brawls broke out between members of the two groups.

    Unbeknownst to the boys, the camp was part of a field study of relationships between groups,

    and the boys behaviours were recorded continually by the camp counselors. When hostilities

    reached a physical level, the observers intervened and separated the two groups. They then

    staged a series of problems that could be solved only if the groups cooperated with each

    other. One problem required locating a leak in the camps water supply. Another required

    them to move a truck that apparently had broken down. During and after the pursuit of these

    goals, animosity between the two groups diminished. When camp was over, the boys went

    back home on the same bus (Sherif, Harvey, White, hood, & Sherif, 1961).

    The Therapy Group. The seven members of the group were outpatients at a university

    clinic. All seven reported problems in relating to other people, to the extent that they could

    not establish meaningful interpersonal relationships. Dr. R. and Dr. M., two experienced

    group psychotherapists, met with the group weekly. During these meetings the group

    members shared problems from their daily lives and received support from one another. Moreimportantly, they learned to disclose information about themselves to others and received

    feedback that helped them acquire useful social skills.

    Despite the fact that the group was composed entirely of people who had never been able to

    maintain friendships or intimate relationships, it became remarkably unified. The members

    rarely missed a session, and they grew more confident whenever they disclosed some

    previously unmentioned aspect of themselves. The therapists felt that the group seemed to

    plod at times, but the clients themselves were excited by their ability to interact successfully.

    The group lasted for 30 months, after which clinical testing indicated that the members did

    extraordinarily well and underwent substantial characterologica changes as well as completesymptomatic remission (Yalom, 1985).

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    What is a Group?

    The group in these examples differed from one another in many ways. Some were small,

    consisting of fewer than ten members (the therapy group), but others were large (Peoples

    Temple). Nearly all the groups had leaders, but the power and duties of the leaders varied

    greatly. The artists, for example, seemed to take turns at leading. Similarly, some of the

    groups formed spontaneously, whereas others were established deliberately for the purpose of

    achieving certain goals. Given these differences, can we accurately call all these collection of

    people groups?

    Kurt Lewin, offered an answer. He felt that despite their difference in size, structure, and

    activities, virtually all groups were based on interdependence among their members (Lewin,1948). We understand intuitively that three persons seated in separate rooms working on

    unrelated tasks can hardly be considered a social group, for they cannot influence one another

    in any way. If, however, we create the potential for interdependence by letting at least one

    person influence or be influenced by others, these three individuals can be considered a

    rudimentary group. The impressionists, for example, lived and worked together, influencing

    one anothers ideas and techniques. Stranded in the Andes, the group of survivors helped one

    another overcome the many hardships they faced. The members of the therapy group

    provided one another with the encouragement and support. Each Rattlers contribution

    brought the group closer to triumph over the Eagles. In all these examples, and in most other

    groups, members have relationships to one another that make them interdependent to some

    significant degree (Cartwright & Zander, 1968).

    By emphasizing the importance of mutual influence among members we can define a group

    as two or more interdependent individuals who influence one another through social

    interaction. This definition, however, is fairly arbitrary. It implies that collections of people

    can be easily classified into two categoriesgroup and nongroupwhen in actuality such

    classifications are rarely so clear-cut. Forsyth provided a list of definitions which are given

    below.

    Defining a Group

    A group is two or more interdependent individuals who influence one another through social

    interaction. Forsyth.p.7

    A group exists when two or more people define themselves as members of it and when its

    existence is recognized by at least one other. Brown, 1988.pp.2-3

    A group is a collection of individuals who have relations to one another that make them

    interdependent to some significant degree. Cartwright and Zender, 1968, p.46.

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    For a collection of individuals to be considered a group there must be some interaction. Hare,

    1976, p.4

    We mean by a group a number of persons who communicate with one another, often over a

    span of time, and who are few enough so that each person is able to communicate with all

    others, not at second hand, through other people, but face to face. Homans, 195-, p.1.

    A group is an aggregation of two or more people who are to some degree in dynamic

    interrelation with one another. McGrath, 1984, p.8.

    Two or more persons who are interacting with one another in such a manner that each person

    influences and is influenced by each other person. Shaw, 1981, p.454.

    A Group is a social unit which consists of a number of individuals who stand in (more or less)

    definite status and role relationships to one another and which possesses a set of values or

    norms of its own regulating the behaviour of individual members, at least in matters of

    consequences to the group. Sherif and Sherif, 1956, p.144.

    Characteristics of GroupsThe dictionary defines a cowas a large female animal kept on farms to produce milk, but

    dairy farmers are likely to be more interested in a cows characteristics (four legs, tail, udder)

    rather than this definition (Webster, 1976). Similarly, if you wanted to understand one of the

    groups we discussed earlier, you would need to be able to say more than Yes, this aggregate

    is a group. You would need, for example, to describe how much members interact with one

    another and how each person is related to other members. You might also need to estimate the

    size of the group, catalog the goals that the group members pursued, index the groups unity,

    and chart the way the group changed over time. Interdependence among members is the

    hallmark of a group, but we should not overlook other crucial characteristics of groups.

    Forsyth identified the following characteristics of social groups:

    1. There is interaction among members of the group.2. The group has a structure based upon role, status, and attraction relations.3. Groups vary in size.4. Group usually exists for a reason (goal).5. There is some degree of cohesiveness in group.6. The group changes over time.