A Quote by Andrew Lansley

Peer pressure and social norms are powerful influences on behaviour, and they are classic excuses. — © Andrew Lansley
Peer pressure and social norms are powerful influences on behaviour, and they are classic excuses.
Peer pressure and social norms are powerful influences on behavior, and they are classic excuses.
Most conduct is guided by norms rather than by laws. Norms are voluntary and are effective because they are enforced by peer pressure.
People just don't realize how much peer pressure, the desire for peer acclamation, influences them.
Your behaviour influences others through a ripple effect. A ripple effect works because everyone influences everyone else. Powerful people are powerful influences.
Of course, peer pressure has a strong positive component. It provides the social cohesion that allows the very development of communal affiliation. But peer power as an extrinsic force is a lot like radiation: a little goes a long way.
Getting high off life is more than enough, and peer pressure ain't peer pressure when a boy is tough.
Ultimately peer pressure can lead people to bully, but peer pressure can also say bullying is not acceptable.
The best kind of accountability on a team is peer-to-peer. Peer pressure is more efficient and effective than going to the leader, anonymously complaining, and having them stop what they are doing to intervene.
Rarely do schools acknowledge the power of peer culture in defining standards, and rarely do they take advantage of this power as an engine for quality. When students themselves are in charge of projects that they care about, peer pressure can become a powerful force for high standards.
We learn the social norms of our society and modify our behaviour accordingly.
How you handle peer pressure - the pressure your children feel as well as the pressure you feel - in the early years will play a significant role in how your children handle peer pressure when they become adolescents.
I suppose it's not a social norm, and not a manly thing to do - to feel, discuss feelings. So that's what I'm giving the finger to. Social norms and stuff...what good are social norms, really? I think all they do is project a limited and harmful image of people. It thus impedes a broader social acceptance of what someone, or a group of people, might actually be like.
Media play a powerful role in establishing and perpetuating social norms.
The way that social norms become social norms is not through any systematic process. It is through a flowering of an understanding within a culture.
Never give in to peer pressure, especially if the peer is not attractive.
Screening out peer pressure and conventional wisdom. It is so powerful, that most of us aren't even aware of how much it is influencing our decisions.
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