Social Psychology
Keep adding new skills with 10,000+ programs for $239 (usually $399). Save now.
Ask Coursera
Recommended experience
Recommended experience
What you'll learn
Learn how people grow, think, and relate across life stages and understand key ideas that explain physical, cognitive, social, and emotional changes.
Details to know
24 assignments
See how employees at top companies are mastering in-demand skills
There are 12 modules in this course
This course offers an engaging introduction to social psychology, the scientific study of how people think, feel, and behave in social situations. It covers a wide range of themes such as social cognition, attitudes, persuasion, conformity, group dynamics, prejudice, aggression, prosocial behavior, attraction, justice, and applied social psychology. Through these topics, learners discover how social and cultural forces shape everyday behavior. The course brings together classic studies and modern perspectives and includes both Western and Indian examples, giving learners a broad and relevant understanding of human social behaviour.
Learners will work through a mix of video lessons, readings, discussions, quizzes, and applied assignments. They will explore how people make sense of the social world, how relationships form and change, how group pressures influence decisions, and how psychological processes show up in systems like the legal and environmental sectors. The course also focuses on ethical questions, the role of cognitive biases, and how psychology can address real-world challenges. By the end, learners develop a strong foundation in understanding human behaviour and learn how to apply psychological ideas to social issues, personal interactions, and informed decision-making.
This course explores how individuals perceive, influence, and relate to others within a social context. It examines foundational topics in social psychology such as social cognition, attitudes, persuasion, conformity, group processes, prejudice, prosocial behavior, and aggression. Students will learn to apply theoretical models to understand social behavior and critically analyze cultural and contextual factors that influence psychological processes. The course emphasizes both Western and Indian cultural contexts. This module offers a comprehensive introduction to social psychology, the scientific study of how individuals think, feel, and behave in social contexts. It examines the dynamic interplay between the individual and the social environment, highlighting how group membership, cultural norms, social influence, and interpersonal relationships shape human experience. Students will explore the historical development of the discipline, from its emergence at the turn of the 20th century to its current global and interdisciplinary relevance.Drawing on both Western and Indian perspectives, the module situates social psychology within diverse cultural frameworks, emphasizing how socio-cultural contexts influence the formation and expression of attitudes, identities, and behaviors. The course also differentiates social psychology from related fields such as sociology, which focuses on large-scale social structures, and personality psychology, which centers on enduring individual differences.Through engagement with landmark studiesβincluding Norman Triplettβs pioneering work on social facilitation, Stanley Milgramβs obedience experiments, and Philip Zimbardoβs Stanford Prison Studyβstudents will critically assess the theoretical and methodological contributions that have shaped the discipline, as well as the ethical debates they have sparked.The module also introduces the scientific methods employed in social psychological research, including laboratory experiments, field studies, surveys, and cross-cultural approaches. Students will learn to apply these methods to analyze and interpret real-world social phenomena, such as prejudice, conformity, prosocial behavior, group decision-making, and digital-era interactions. By the end of the module, students will have developed a nuanced understanding of the scope and boundaries of social psychology in relation to allied disciplines. They will also gain the ability to critically evaluate both classic and contemporary research within varied cultural contexts. In addition, students will acquire practical skills in applying social psychological theories and methods to everyday interpersonal interactions as well as broader societal challenges.
What's included
8 videos3 readings2 assignments
8 videosβ’Total 46 minutes
- Meet Your Faculty - Prof. Madhumita R Dhuparβ’1 minute
- Introduction to the Courseβ’3 minutes
- Defining Social Psychology β Scope, Concepts, and Distinctions β’6 minutes
- The Historical Foundations of Social Psychologyβ’8 minutes
- Research Methods and Ethical Milestones in Social Psychologyβ’6 minutes
- Key Domains β Thinking, Influence, and Relationshipsβ’6 minutes
- Cultural Contexts and Contemporary Applications β’8 minutes
- Critical Perspectives and Limitationsβ’9 minutes
3 readingsβ’Total 30 minutes
- Meet Your Faculty - Prof. Madhumita R Dhuparβ’10 minutes
- References Readingβ’10 minutes
- Readings for Module 1β’10 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 40 minutes
- Quiz - 1β’20 minutes
- Assessment - 1β’20 minutes
This module delves into the cognitive processes that shape how we perceive, interpret, and remember information about others. It emphasizes heuristics, schemas, attribution theory, and cultural influences on judgment.
What's included
5 videos1 reading2 assignments1 discussion prompt
5 videosβ’Total 42 minutes
- The Mechanics of Social Cognitionβ’8 minutes
- Cognitive Shortcuts and Heuristicsβ’8 minutes
- Emotional and Counterintuitive Cognitionβ’8 minutes
- Attribution Theories and Errorsβ’9 minutes
- Culture, Schema Types, and Attributional Complexityβ’8 minutes
1 readingβ’Total 10 minutes
- Readings for Module 2β’10 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 40 minutes
- Quiz - 2β’20 minutes
- Assessment - 2β’20 minutes
1 discussion promptβ’Total 15 minutes
- Ungraded Discussion Promptβ’15 minutes
This module examines the structure, formation, and function of attitudes. It explores how attitudes influence behavior, how they are measured, and the psychological mechanisms of attitude change, including cognitive dissonance.
What's included
6 videos1 reading2 assignments
6 videosβ’Total 49 minutes
- What Are Attitudes and Where Do They Come From?β’8 minutes
- The Structure of Attitudes β ABC Model in Actionβ’9 minutes
- Do Attitudes Predict Behavior?β’8 minutes
- Cognitive Dissonance β When Beliefs and Actions Clashβ’8 minutes
- Culture, Attitudes, and Persuasionβ’8 minutes
- Attitudes and Behavior: Foundations, Mechanisms, and Cultural Variationsβ’8 minutes
1 readingβ’Total 10 minutes
- Readings for Module 3β’10 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 40 minutes
- Quiz - 3β’20 minutes
- Assessment - 3β’20 minutes
This module investigates the development and structure of self-concept, identity, and self-awareness. It explores philosophical, developmental, and sociocultural dimensions of selfhood, drawing on both Western and Indian thought.
What's included
6 videos1 reading2 assignments1 discussion prompt
6 videosβ’Total 63 minutes
- The Nature and Origins of the Selfβ’11 minutes
- Building Blocks of Self-Conceptβ’10 minutes
- Knowing Ourselves β Self-Discovery and Comparisonβ’10 minutes
- Presenting the Self β Impression Managementβ’13 minutes
- Culture, Self, and Identityβ’10 minutes
- Philosophical Exploration of the Selfβ’9 minutes
1 readingβ’Total 10 minutes
- Readings for Module 4β’10 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 40 minutes
- Quiz - 4β’20 minutes
- Assessment - 4β’20 minutes
1 discussion promptβ’Total 15 minutes
- Ungraded Discussion Promptβ’15 minutes
This module examines how individuals are influenced by others through conformity, compliance, and obedience. Classic studies are revisited alongside culturally relevant examples, highlighting ethical considerations in persuasive influence.
What's included
5 videos1 reading2 assignments
5 videosβ’Total 51 minutes
- Foundations of Social Influence and the Process of Socializationβ’10 minutes
- Conformity β Mechanisms, Cultural Nuances, and Classic Researchβ’10 minutes
- Compliance β Psychological Triggers and Persuasion Techniquesβ’9 minutes
- Obedience and Minority Influence β Power, Resistance, and Changeβ’9 minutes
- Social Influence in Collective Action and Ethical Considerationsβ’13 minutes
1 readingβ’Total 10 minutes
- Readings for Module 5β’10 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 40 minutes
- Quiz - 5β’20 minutes
- Assessment - 5β’20 minutes
This module explores how individuals behave in group settings, focusing on social roles, conformity, leadership, decision-making, and intergroup conflict. It applies theories such as social identity theory and discusses cultural dimensions of group behavior.
What's included
5 videos1 reading2 assignments1 discussion prompt
5 videosβ’Total 62 minutes
- What Are Groups and Why Do We Join Them?β’14 minutes
- Inside the Group β Cohesion, Roles, and Behaviorβ’11 minutes
- Leadership in Groups β Styles, Gender, and Powerβ’15 minutes
- Group Decision-Making and Performance Pitfallsβ’11 minutes
- Intergroup Dynamics, Identity, and Social Changeβ’12 minutes
1 readingβ’Total 10 minutes
- Readings for Module 6β’10 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 40 minutes
- Quiz - 6β’20 minutes
- Assessment - 6β’20 minutes
1 discussion promptβ’Total 15 minutes
- Ungraded Discussion Promptβ’15 minutes
This module investigates the origins and effects of stereotypes, prejudice, and discrimination. It examines psychological theories and real-world consequences, including stereotype threat, microaggressions, and caste-based discrimination.
What's included
5 videos1 reading2 assignments1 discussion prompt
5 videosβ’Total 55 minutes
- Understanding Bias β Stereotypes, Prejudice, and Discriminationβ’12 minutes
- Prejudice in Action β From Attitudes to Inequalityβ’11 minutes
- The Psychology of Prejudice β Emotion, Cognition, and Contradictionβ’12 minutes
- Modern Discrimination β Subtle Bias and Systemic Impactβ’9 minutes
- Reducing Prejudice β Interventions and Social Changeβ’11 minutes
1 readingβ’Total 10 minutes
- Readings for Module 7β’10 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 40 minutes
- Quiz - 7β’20 minutes
- Assessment - 7β’20 minutes
1 discussion promptβ’Total 15 minutes
- Ungraded Discussion Promptβ’15 minutes
This module explores the psychological and biological foundations of aggression. It examines types, causes, and consequences of aggressive behavior and evaluates theoretical approaches to its regulation and reduction levels.
What's included
5 videos1 reading2 assignments
5 videosβ’Total 57 minutes
- Understanding Aggression β Definitions, Traits, and Bullyingβ’11 minutes
- Theories of Aggression β Biological, Evolutionary, and Psychoanalyticβ’12 minutes
- Social Learning and the Environment β How Aggression Is Acquiredβ’12 minutes
- Group Context and Extreme Aggressionβ’12 minutes
- Reducing Aggression β Psychological and Social Interventionsβ’10 minutes
1 readingβ’Total 10 minutes
- Readings for Module 8β’10 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 40 minutes
- Quiz - 8β’20 minutes
- Assessment - 8β’20 minutes
This module investigates helping behavior, distinguishing altruism from prosociality. It covers evolutionary, cognitive, and cultural explanations, emphasizing conditions that promote or inhibit helping in emergencies and everyday life.
What's included
5 videos1 reading2 assignments
5 videosβ’Total 51 minutes
- Understanding Prosocial Behaviour β Forms, Motives, and Altruismβ’11 minutes
- Evolution and Altruism β Kin Selection, Reciprocity, and Inclusive Fitnessβ’9 minutes
- The Psychology of Helping β Mood, Personality, and Social Normsβ’10 minutes
- Barriers to Helping β The Bystander Effect and Urban Influencesβ’10 minutes
- Promoting Prosocial Action β Overcoming Inaction and Fostering Altruismβ’11 minutes
1 readingβ’Total 10 minutes
- Readings for Module 9β’10 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 40 minutes
- Quiz - 9β’20 minutes
- Assessment - 9β’20 minutes
This module explores the psychological foundations of attraction, love, and relationship maintenance, with a focus on both universal principles and Indian cultural contexts such as arranged marriages and family dynamics.
What's included
5 videos1 reading2 assignments
5 videosβ’Total 58 minutes
- Foundations of Attraction β Proximity, Familiarity, and Similarityβ’12 minutes
- Reciprocal Liking, Physical Attractiveness, and Cultural Idealsβ’10 minutes
- Attachment Styles, Relationship Economics, and Gender Normsβ’11 minutes
- Love Types, Relationship Maintenance, and Indian Family Systemsβ’12 minutes
- Relationship Breakdown, Dissolution, and Social Scripts in Indiaβ’12 minutes
1 readingβ’Total 10 minutes
- Readings for Module 10β’10 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 40 minutes
- Quiz - 10β’20 minutes
- Assessment - 10β’20 minutes
This module explores the dynamic intersection of psychology and the legal system, with a focus on the Indian context. It investigates how cognitive biases, memory distortions, social influence, and mental health impact legal decision-making, eyewitness testimony, and judicial outcomes.
What's included
5 videos1 reading2 assignments
5 videosβ’Total 54 minutes
- Psychology in the Legal System β Memory, Misinformation, and Eyewitness Testimonyβ’11 minutes
- Deception Detection, False Confessions, and Interrogation Practicesβ’11 minutes
- Judicial Bias, Public Opinion, and Sentencing Inequitiesβ’11 minutes
- Mental Illness, Culpability, and Victim Psychologyβ’11 minutes
- Reforming Indian Justice Through Psychological Scienceβ’11 minutes
1 readingβ’Total 10 minutes
- Readings for Module 11β’10 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 40 minutes
- Quiz - 11β’20 minutes
- Assessment - 11β’20 minutes
This module examines the psychological dimensions of environmental crises and sustainability. It explores how human behaviour contributes to climate change, resource use, and waste, and how social psychology offers strategies to foster sustainable practices. Students will also reflect on the connections between sustainability and well-being, with examples from Indian and global contexts.
What's included
5 videos2 readings2 assignments
5 videosβ’Total 60 minutes
- Our Environmental Crisisβ’14 minutes
- Applied Social Psychology for Real-World Challengesβ’12 minutes
- Strategies for Sustainable Behaviorβ’11 minutes
- The Psychology of Happinessβ’12 minutes
- Combining Sustainability and Well-beingβ’12 minutes
2 readingsβ’Total 20 minutes
- Readings for Module 12β’10 minutes
- Course Wrap-Upβ’10 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 40 minutes
- Quiz - 12β’20 minutes
- Assessment - 12β’20 minutes
Build toward a degree
This course is part of the following degree program(s) offered by O.P. Jindal Global University. If you are admitted and enroll, your completed coursework may count toward your degree learning and your progress can transfer with you.ΒΉ
Instructors
Offered by
Explore more from Psychology
- Status: PreviewW
Wesleyan University
Course
- Status: Free TrialL
Lecturio
Course
- Status: Free TrialA
American Psychological Association
Course
- Status: PreviewO
O.P. Jindal Global University
Course
Why people choose Coursera for their career
Frequently asked questions
To access the course materials, assignments and to earn a Certificate, you will need to purchase the Certificate experience when you enroll in a course. You can try a Free Trial instead, or apply for Financial Aid. The course may offer 'Full Course, No Certificate' instead. This option lets you see all course materials, submit required assessments, and get a final grade. This also means that you will not be able to purchase a Certificate experience.
When you purchase a Certificate you get access to all course materials, including graded assignments. Upon completing the course, your electronic Certificate will be added to your Accomplishments page - from there, you can print your Certificate or add it to your LinkedIn profile.
Yes. In select learning programs, you can apply for financial aid or a scholarship if you canβt afford the enrollment fee. If fin aid or scholarship is available for your learning program selection, youβll find a link to apply on the description page.
More questions
Financial aid available,
