Abstract

Three groups, alike in Rod and Frame Test (RFT) scores on pretesting, were given different instructions for Rotter's Locus of Control scale. Thirty-two Ss were told to fake internal or external answers. Another 16 Ss were instructed to answer the scale according to their own actual beliefs. Analysis of RFT pretest-posttest changes revealed that in both experimental conditions initially field-dependent Ss changed in the direction of higher field independence, and field-independent Ss shifted toward higher field dependence. The total amount of change manifested by field-dependent Ss in both conditions was in excess of the change by field-independent Ss. Standard test-taking instructions raised the level of field independence for field-dependent and field-independent Ss, with the magnitude of change greater among field-independent Ss. When Ss given internal and external instructions filled out the Locus of Control scale again at the end of the experiment, field-independent Ss professed to hold significantly more beliefs than field-dependent Ss that were coincident with beliefs of their previously simulated role. The findings were discussed primarily in terms of the relationship between role-playing and development of identity.

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