Wikipedia:Wiki Ed/University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg/Theories of Persuasion Spring 2024 (Spring)

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Course name
Theories of Persuasion Spring 2024
Institution
University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg
Instructor
Danielle Mehlman-Brightwell
Wikipedia Expert
Brianda (Wiki Ed)
Subject
Science Communication
Course dates
2024-01-08 00:00:00 UTC – 2024-04-26 23:59:59 UTC
Approximate number of student editors
20


This course surveys theories of persuasion that have been articulated during the twentieth century. It seeks to compare and contrast research about how the spoken word and the visual image influence public belief and action.

Students will be assigned theories of persuasion and will work in teams to add content and fill in gaps on the following wiki pages. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persuasion#Theories

Student Assigned Reviewing
Plizington Elaboration likelihood model Boomerang effect (psychology), Cognitive dissonance
Lawflower21 Monroe's motivated sequence Boomerang effect (psychology), Cognitive dissonance
Icedcoffee14 Cognitive dissonance Boomerang effect (psychology), Two-step flow of communication
Cinnamoroll21 Cognitive dissonance, Attribution (psychology)
Gale Winters Social judgment theory Cognitive dissonance, Attribution (psychology)
Hellomuffin Cognitive dissonance Boomerang effect (psychology), Social judgment theory
WesDig11 Boomerang effect (psychology) Elaboration likelihood model, Two-step flow of communication
Dukeskywalker100 Cognitive dissonance
Mojjones6 Attribution (psychology) Cognitive dissonance, Social judgment theory
Jordonmcwilliams Elaboration likelihood model Two-step flow of communication, Social judgment theory
$unflower93 Boomerang effect (psychology) Elaboration likelihood model, Two-step flow of communication
Maryrose0725 Monroe's motivated sequence
Guapoaaron Two-step flow of communication
Aem182 [[1]]
GaffneyJr11 Attribution (psychology) Two-step flow of communication, Social judgment theory