The Measurement Of Attitude

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The scientific study of social phenomena suffers from the serious handicap that the phenomena that we call social are exceedingly difficult to describe in objective terms, to say nothing of quantitative measurement. Whenever objective or quantitative treatment is attempted we not infrequently feel that the very essence has been squeezed out of the effects that we want to study. About this feeling concerning quantitative treatment in the social studies two comments may be made.

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THE MEASUREMENT OF ATTITUDE THE MEASUREMENT OF ATTITUDE A Psychophysical Method and Some Experiments ("i.citha Scale for Measuring Attitude toward the Church By L. L. THURSTONE AND E. J. CHAVE THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS CHICAGO ~ ILLINOIS THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS, CHICAGO 37 Cambridge University Press, London, N.W. I, England The University of Toronto Press, Toronto 5, Canada Copyright I929 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved Published September I929. Sixth Impression I956. Composed and printed by THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A. PREFACE The experiments described in this monograph have been conducted jointly by the two authors. The material for the scale and all the data were compiled by Mr. Chave who made all arrangements for conducting the experimental tests. He was also responsible for supervising the tabulation of the results and he has written chapter vi on "Further Studies of Validity." The chapters on measurement theory were written by Mr. Thurstone, who is also responsible for the statistical methods used. We wish to acknowledge the assistance of instructors and students who have served as subjects for these experiments by filling in the various forms and by sorting the lists of statements of opinion in various ways. Dean Boucher made it possible to conduct one form of the tests in a Freshman assembly in Mandel Hall and Mr. Fred Moore arranged for conducting a similar test at the Chicago Forum. Dean Shailer Mathews and Professor T. G. Soares placed at our disposal certain funds for the experimental and statistical work, and the Local Community Research Committee at the University of Chicago has also sponsored the project financially. Professor Faris has kindly consented to 181:us reprint sections of an article in the A merican Journal of Sociology (January, 1928) which described the possibility of measuring attitude. The studies there described were begun under the auspices of the Institute for Juvenile Research. We also wish to express our appreciation of the competent statistical work of Miss Annette McBroom and Mr. C. W. Brown who have been responsible for the statistical work on this monograph. We regard the present. experiments as preliminary in character, and a second scale for measuring attitude toward the church is now in process of constructioa It js hoped that it will be relatively free from the defeGl'S~ ~ found in the present PREFACE vi experimental scale. Our main contribution is probably in the idea of using the equally-often-noticed difference or, preferably, the discriminal error as a unit of measurement for the objective description of attitude and opinion. E. J. CHAVE L. L. THURSTONE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO' April, 1928 TABLE OF CONTENTS V PREFACE MEASUREMENT IN RELIGIOUS EDUCATION. SUMMARY OF THE MEASUREMENT I. II. THEORY OF ATTITUDE E. J. Chase L. L.- Thurstone METHOD. MEASUREMENT . The Objective Description of Attitude . The Possibility of Measuring Attitude. The Attitude Variable A Frequency Distribution of Attitudes A Unit of Measurement for Attitudes . II