Activity Question - Sociology
Due Date:
Friday, October 15th, 2021
Activity Five
Week Nine
Directions
Before starting this assignment, you are expected to have reviewed the lecture slides and your
lecture notes. The purpose of this activity is to give you exposure to skills and information that
will enhance your understanding of concepts related to theories of status organizing processes
and expectation states.
After completing the reviewing the slides, your notes, watching the supplementary videos, and
reading the below overview, please answer the five questions below.
Once you have completed this assignment, please submit it by 11:59 PM.
Specifications
● Must be at least 2.5 pages total
● Number your responses
● Include your responses only
● Double-spaced
● 12 pt. Times New Roman
● MS Word document
● Submit to Canvas dropbox for Activity 5
I. Assignment
Expectation states theory explains why social hierarchies emerge in small, task-oriented groups.
Both known information and implicit, often unconscious, assumptions, based on status
characteristics, result in the evaluations of an individual’s ability to contribute to the task at hand.
Evaluations are based on (1) specific skills and abilities relevant to the task and (2)
characteristics associated with perceived superiority. When the combination is favorable, group
members have a positive view of a person’s ability to contribute to the task. When the
combination is unfavorable, group members have a negative view of a person’s ability to
contribute to the task. This results in a hierarchy where one’s position corresponds to the level of
esteem and influence within the group.
1. Describe a situation when you were a member of a goal-oriented small group (e.g., class,
sports team, school club, community organization, work group, etc.). How was the group
hierarchically organized? Considering the aggregate assumption, which status
characteristics were valued higher than others? What combinations of status
characteristics were most favorable? Why (hint: how did evaluations of these
characteristics shape group members’ views of a person’s ability to contribute to the
group’s goals)?
According to the salience assumption, for any attribute to affect performance expectations, it
must be socially significant. A status characteristic is salient if it either differentiates actors or is
relevant to the task. The same characteristic (e.g., having a college degree) can advantage an
actor in one setting (with a less educated group), have no impact in another (in a group where all
have university degrees), and disadvantage the actor in a third setting (with a more educated
group). Thus, no status characteristic advantages or disadvantages an actor in all settings.
Whether the status beliefs culturally available to actors shape performance expectations in any
actual setting depends on the structure of the local setting itself.
2. Describe a situation (or situations) where, in a collectively oriented group, a diffuse status
characteristic is salient because it differentiates group members.
a. In a setting where the status characteristic is an advantage.
b. In a setting where the status characteristic has no impact.
c. In a setting where the status characteristic is a disadvantage.
3. Describe a situation (or situations) where, in a task oriented group, a specific status
characteristic is salient because it is relevant to the task at hand.
a. In a setting where the status characteristic is an advantage.
b. In a setting where the status characteristic has no impact.
c. In a setting where the status characteristic is a disadvantage.
The shared focus of group members on the group’s goal (i.e., the collective orientation) generates
a pressure to anticipate the relative quality of each member’s contribution to completing the task
in order to decide how to act. When members of the group, for whatever reason, anticipate that a
specific individual will make more valuable contributions, they will likely defer more to this
individual and give them more opportunities to participate. These implicit, often unconscious,
anticipations of the relative quality of individual members’ future performance. Expectation
states theory argues that when a socially valued reward is distributed unequally among members
of a group, the actors will infer performance expectations from their reward differences. In other
words, the unequal possession of rewards generates status distinctions that are considered
legitimate by those in the setting. By creating performance expectations, the unequal rewards
appear to be “deserved” and, thus, bring respect, deference, and influence. In this way, just as
status characteristics can create status hierarchies, the differential distribution of rewards, can
actually create a status hierarchy among actors or modify positions in an existing hierarchy.
4. Describe a situation where someone was given a socially valued reward that resulted in
the assumption that these rewards corresponded to esteem and influence within the group.
What was the reward? Why was it valued? In what ways did this reward/these rewards
generate status distinctions that were considered legitimate by those in the setting? In
what ways did receiving this reward/these rewards result in higher performance
expectations?
Behavior interchange patterns shape performance expectations most powerfully among those
actors in a group who are equals in both their external status characteristics and their reward
levels. When actors differ in status characteristics, the differentiated performance expectations
created by the status characteristics shape the actors’ verbal and nonverbal assertiveness.
Consequently, differences in status characteristics shape behavioral interchange patterns. For
example, a common assumption is that people who speak more confidently about things with
which they have more experience. Salient status characteristics induce actors to assume that the
more assertive actor is more competent at the task than the more deferential actor, creating
differential performance expectations for them. Behavioral interchange patterns are the means by
which expectation states theory accounts for the development structures in homogeneous groups.
5. Describe a situation where, in a homogeneous group, someone displayed behavior
resulting in higher performance expectations. Did their subsequent performance confirm
or disconfirm these assumptions? Did their level of esteem and influence within the
group change as a result? If so, what status characteristics became most salient, giving
someone else higher esteem and influence in the group? If not, why?
STATUS
& Expectation
States
ORGANIZING
02.STATUS
CHARACTERISTICS
THEORY
Focuses on the way certain
evaluations or attitudes
shape interactional
behavior
ACTIVATE GENERAL & SPECIFIC
EXPECTATIONS ABOUT PERFORMANCE
Differentially valued attributes
associated with sex, as well as
generalized expectations about
which sex will be more or less
capable in different situations
GENERATE DISTINCT EXPECTATIONS
ABOUT SPECIFIC ABILITIES
Mathematical ability, creative
writing, etc. Has the potential
to affect the status organizing
process in a task-related
setting, if the ability is
relevant to the task
TYPES OF STATUS CHARACTERISTICS
DIFFUSE SPECIFIC
ASSUMPTIONS
Status characteristics
theory seeks to explain how
beliefs about status
characteristics get
translated into performance
expectations, which shape
the behaviors of individuals
in a group. In other words,
it explores the process of
attributing specific
abilities to individuals
based on the status
characteristics they
possess.
Five assumptions that link
beliefs about status to behavior
Salience Assumption
For any attribute to affect performance expectations, it must be
socially significant. A status characteristic is salient if it either
differentiates actors or is relevant to the task
● The same characteristic (e.g., having a college degree) can
advantage an actor in one setting (with a less educated group),
have no impact in another (in a group where all have university
degrees), & disadvantage the actor in a third setting (with a more
educated group)
○ No status characteristic advantages or disadvantages an actor
in all settings
PERFORMANCE EXPECTANCIES
Those with higher performance
expectancies will be higher in
this order
Higher positioning entails
greater opportunities to perform,
initiate problem-solving, higher
evaluations, reject influence, &
to influence others in the group
ADVANTAGES & OPPORTUNITIESA group member’s performance
expectancy determines their
positioning in the power &
prestige order of the group
SALIENCE
Burden of Proof Assumption
Concerns the way status characteristics that differentiate actors, but
are not initially relevant to the performance of the group’s task,
impact the formation of performance expectations
● All salient information is incorporated, unless something in the
setting explicitly dissociates the status characteristic from the
task
Sequencing Assumption
Specifies what happens in the more complicated situation when actors
either enter or leave an existing social setting
● The performance expectations that formed in one encounter carry
over to the next encounter, even if the specific actors change
○ This assumption has been used to intervene in the status
generalization process
Aggregate Assumption
Explains how the status information associated with multiple
characteristics is combined to form aggregated performance
expectations
● In groups, people often differ from one another on several status
characteristics at the same time, and often these multiple status
characteristics generate inconsistent expectations for performance
○ It offers a procedure for making predictions for the order of
performance expectations actors will construct from a given
set of salient status characteristics
Comparison Assumption
Describes how aggregated performance assumptions are translated into
behavior. Relative aggregated performance expectations for any two
actors are compared
● The higher the expectations that an actor holds for herself
compared to another actor, the greater the expectation advantage
she will have over the second actor
03.REWARDS
Differential
distribution of
rewards, like status
characteristics, can
actually create a
status hierarchy
among actors or
modify positions in
an existing hierarchy
The Formation of Performance
Expectations & Status Hierarchies
Socially
significant
characteristics
Social rewards
Behavioral
interchange
patterns
Performance
expectations
Behavioral inequalities/
status hierarchies
REWARDS & PERFORMANCE
EXPECTATIONS
When a socially valued reward
is distributed unequally
among members of a group, the
actors will infer performance
expectations from their
reward differences
One study showed that when a
third party gave differential
rewards to group members who
had no other basis for
evaluating their performances
on a shared task, the members
used the reward differences
to infer ability differences
THEORY EXAMPLE
REWARDS & PERFORMANCE
EXPECTATIONS
In this way, the differential
distribution of rewards, like
status characteristics, can
actually create a status
hierarchy among actors or
modify positions in an
existing hierarchy
Another study showed that
allocating differential pay
levels to participants in an
experiment created
corresponding influence
hierarchies among them during
interaction
THEORY EXAMPLE
04.
The third factor that
affects performance
expectations
BEHAVIORAL
INTERCHANGE
PATTERNS
BEHAVIORAL INTERCHANGE PATTERNS
Such a pattern occurs between two or more
actors when one engages in assertive,
higher status behaviors (e.g., initiating
speech, making a task suggestion, resisting
change in the face of disagreement) that
are responded to with deferential, lower
status behaviors by the other actors (e.g.,
hesitating to speak, positively evaluating
the other’s suggestion, changing to agree
with the other)
Behavioral interchange patterns
shape performance expectations
most among actors in a group who
are equals in both their external
status characteristics & their
reward levels, such as between two
women in a mixed sex group
A
Behavioral interchange patterns
are the means by which expectation
states theory accounts for the
development of status structures
in homogeneous groups
B
Following the common
assumption that people speak
up more confidently about
things at which they have more
experience, salient status
typifications induce actors to
assume that the more assertive
actor is more competent at the
task than the more deferential
actor, creating differential
performance expectations for
them
BEHAVIORAL INTERCHANGE
RESEARCH EXAMPLE
One study showed that when
mixed sex dyads shifted from a
gender neutral task, where the
man had a status advantage, to
a feminine typed task, where
the woman had a status
advantage, the actors’
participation rates & assertive
nonverbal behaviors reversed
from a pattern favoring the man
to one favoring the woman
When actors differ in status
characteristics, the
differentiated performance
expectations created by the
status characteristics shape
the actors’ verbal & nonverbal
assertiveness. Consequently,
differences in status
characteristics shape
behavioral interchange
patterns
BEHAVIORAL INTERCHANGE
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STATUS
& Expectation
States
ORGANIZING
01.EXPECTATION
STATES
THEORY
Aims to explain how our
preconceived notions about
others, based on their
identities, are the basis for
status hierarchies in small
groups
TASK ORIENTED
Individuals are task oriented
when they are primarily
motivated towards solving a
problem
Individuals are collectively
oriented when they consider it
legitimate & necessary to take
into account each other’s
contributions when completing the
task
COLLECTIVELY ORIENTED
Seeks to explain the emergence
of status hierarchies in
situations where actors are
oriented toward the
accomplishment of a collective
goal or task
EXPECTATION STATES THEORY
SPECIFIC SKILLS & ABILITIES
RELEVANT TO THE TASK
Such as prior experience or
training related to the
task at hand
CHARACTERISTICS ASSOCIATED
WITH PERCEIVED SUPERIORITY
Such as gender, age, race,
education, & physical
attractiveness
EVALUATION CRITERIA
01 02
PERFORMANCE EXPECTATION STATES
01
The shared focus on
the group’s goal
generates a pressure
to anticipate the
relative value of
each member
02
When members
anticipate one will
make more valuable
contributions, they
will likely defer to
this individual
03
These implicit
anticipations of the
relative quality of
members’ performance
are performance
expectation states
Value Deference Expectation
Expectation States Theory
Expectation States Theory
explains why social
hierarchies emerge in small,
task-oriented groups. Both
known information & implicit
assumptions, based on status
characteristics, result in
the evaluations of someone’s
ability to contribute to the
task at hand
When the combination is favorable,
we will have a positive view of a
person’s ability to contribute to
the task & vice versa
A
This results in a hierarchy where
one’s position corresponds to the
level of esteem & influence within
the group
B
The Formation of Performance
Expectations & Status Hierarchies
Socially
significant
characteristics
Social rewards
Behavioral
interchange
patterns
Performance
expectations
Behavioral inequalities/
status hierarchies
02.STATUS
CHARACTERISTICS
THEORY
Focuses on the way certain
evaluations or attitudes
shape interactional
behavior
ACTIVATE GENERAL & SPECIFIC
EXPECTATIONS ABOUT PERFORMANCE
Differentially valued attributes
associated with sex, as well as
generalized expectations about
which sex will be more or less
capable in different situations
GENERATE DISTINCT EXPECTATIONS
ABOUT SPECIFIC ABILITIES
Mathematical ability, creative
writing, etc. Has the potential
to affect the status organizing
process in a task-related
setting, if the ability is
relevant to the task
TYPES OF STATUS CHARACTERISTICS
DIFFUSE SPECIFIC
DIFFERENTIATION
Even when unrelated to the
task, group members will form
expectations & act as if the
information is relevant
When group members collectively
believe that a particular
characteristic is relevant to
the task
Differentiation of group
members occurs when there are
differing states of status
characteristics within a group
ASSUMPTIONS
Status characteristics
theory seeks to explain how
beliefs about status
characteristics get
translated into performance
expectations, which shape
the behaviors of individuals
in a group. In other words,
it explores the process of
attributing specific
abilities to individuals
based on the status
characteristics they
possess.
Five assumptions that link
beliefs about status to behavior
ASSUMPTIONS
03
Comparison
Assumption
04
Sequencing
Assumption
Aggregate
Assumption
05
Salience
Assumption
Burden of Proof
Assumption
01 02
—BRIAN TRACY
“Become the kind of leader that
people would follow voluntarily,
even if you had no title or
position.”
”
Author & Motivational Speaker
No idea who Brian Tracy is,
but I thought this quote was
perfect for the section
because EST focuses less on
those formal hierarchies
(e.g., boss/employee) & more
on those less formal group
hierarchies. So, even though
someone doesn’t hold a
formal title or position,
they are still held in
higher esteem & have more
influence within a group.
Expectation states theory
explores this aspect of
group processes.
Reason for choosing this quote
Kind of like Regina George -
no one elected her to be the
group’s leader but she is the
member with the most status &
influence over the group
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