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Higher education and sociopolitical orientation: The role of social influence in the liberalisation of students
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Higher education and sociopolitical orientation: The role of social influence in the liberalisation of students

European journal of psychology of education, Vol.22(3), pp.259-274
2007

Abstract

Psychology Psychology, Educational Social Sciences
Research has long suggested that higher education leads to liberalisation in students' sociopolitical orientations (e.g., Feldman & Newcomb, 1969; Newcomb, 194311957; Pascarella & Terenzini, 1991). Differences in level of liberalisation depending on academic discipline have also been found (e.g., Baer & Lambert, 1982; 1990; Guimond & Palmer, 1990; 1996). Two hypotheses have been proposed to explain these differences: self-selection, where people choose disciplines whose views most closely match their own; and socialisation, where people's belief systems change to match their discipline's. Two key mechanisms are thought to drive socialisation: normative (people's attitudes change to match those around them) and informational influences (provision of specific knowledge creates attitude change). This paper reviews the major evidence of liberalisation of students' orientations, as well as evidence for the self-selection and socialisation explanations, and for normative and informational influence. It concludes with suggestions as to how future researchers can investigate whether change occurs and the processes by which this may be occurring.

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#10 Reduced Inequalities

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Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.73 Social Psychology
6.73.447 Racial Identity
Web Of Science research areas
Psychology, Educational
ESI research areas
Psychiatry/Psychology
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