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Too Good to be True:
Resisting Cults and Psychological Manipulation
Teacher's Guide
A Lesson Plan for Middle
Schools and High Schools
Marcia Rudin
Developed by the American Family Foundation; Copyright 1992 American Family
Foundation. The following is a revised version prepared for the AFF Web site.
See "Free Info – Educators" and "Free Info – Students" for additional resources
from AFF’s Web site.
"When you meet the friendliest people you have ever known, who introduce you
to the most loving group of people you've ever encountered, and you find the
leader to be the most inspired, caring, compassionate and understanding person
you've ever met, and then you learn that the cause of the group is something you
never dared hope could be accomplished, and all of this sounds too good to be
true it probably is too good to betrue!"
Jeannie Mills
The American Family Foundation (AFF) helps professionals in colleges,
universities, high schools, middle schools, churches, synagogues, and other
settings educate themselves and their young people about cults, psychological
manipulation, and occult rituals by providing educational programs and
materials. AFF is a nonprofit research and educational organization that
collects information on cultic groups and manipulative techniques of persuasion
and control, analyzes this information in order to advance understanding of the
problem and possible solutions to it, and shares it with other professionals,
the general public, and those requesting help with cult involvements.
The author would like to express her appreciation to the following people who
assisted in the conception and development of this lesson plan: Dr. Sandy
Andron, Linda Blood, Michael Caslin, Priscilla Coates, Paul Engel, Hope Evans,
Robert Fellows, Dr. Doris Holloway-Abels, Dr. Michael Langone, Arnold Markowitz,
Dr. Herbert Nieburg, Nadia Preyma, Herbert Rosedale, Esq., Judy Safransky, and
Dr. Robert Safransky.
Table of Contents of Teacher's Guide
To the Teacher
Introduction Page
What is a Cult?
The Harm Cults Can Cause
Mind Control and Psychological Manipulation Page
Saying "No" to Mind Control and Psychological Manipulation
Occult Rituals
How to Avoid Getting Into a Cult and Getting Involved in Occult Rituals
Supplementary Writing Project
Post-Test
Where to Go for Additional Information and Assistance
Student Evaluation
Teacher Evaluation and Questionnaire
Additional Resources
Duplication Permission Form
To the Teacher
With all the other problems youngsters face today and with all the other
material you have to cover in your classroom, why is it so important to teach
this unit?
There are more cults around than ever before. Experts estimate there are
3,000 to 5,000 groups. They have one to three million members, and they can be
found throughout the world.
Cults seriously and sometimes permanently disrupt their members' educations
and lives. A survey of 308 former cult members from more than 100 different cult
groups completed in 1992 by American Family Foundation Research Director Michael
Langone confirms this: of those 308 who were students when first contacted by
cults, 38% dropped out of school after joining the group.
While cult groups have changed their "pitch" and are now also recruiting
older, established and more affluent people, young people are still their
primary targets. Twenty-seven percent of the 308 former cult members in Dr.
Langone's 1992 survey were undergraduates at a college or university when they
first made contact with their group. Six percent were graduate students. It's
important, therefore, to prepare your students to meet the challenge of cult
recruitment in college.
However, your students must also learn to meet this challenge now, because
youngsters are being aggressively approached by recruiters at earlier ages. Ten
percent of the 308 former members in Langone's research study reported they were
in high school when they were recruited. Earlier research also documents the
extent of attempted recruitment of high school youngsters by cults. Fifty-four
percent of high school students surveyed by psychologist Philip Zimbardo in 1985
reported that they had been approached by cult recruiters, and 3% reported they
belonged to cultic groups. Surveys of high school students in the Boston area in
1984 found that 1.5% of the students in a working-class suburb and 3% in an
affluent suburb reported that they had belonged or did belong to cultic groups.
Other statistics from the 1992 American Family Foundation study further
confirm the need for early preventive education. Seventy-two percent of the 308
former members questioned report that group pressures made it difficult to leave
the group. This illustrates the importance of teaching young people how to
resist pressure and psychological manipulation.
It's also important to make adolescents and teens aware of psychological
manipulation in general, especially because they are so sensitive to peer
pressure. One of the goals of this lesson plan is to enable youngsters to apply
what they learn here about psychological manipulation to other areas of their
life and to sharpen their critical-thinking skills.
There are other reasons why teachers should be aware of cults and
psychological manipulation. You may have a youngster in your class who has
joined, or is thinking of joining a destructive cult. You may have a child in
your class who is being raised in a cult group, or —and this is more likely —
one whose family has left a group and is trying to adjust to the outside world.
It's important that teachers, school counselors, and administrators be aware of
the cult phenomenon, know what to do in these cases, and know where to turn for
further advice and assistance.
Occult Rituals
In the last few years, concern has grown about the apparent increase of
participation of young people in occult rituals. These activities are often
classified under the term "satanism." But not all of these rituals are based on
the specific ideology of satanism. Therefore, the broader and more accurate term
"occult rituals" will be used here.
No one knows how much occult-ritual activity goes on because it is done
secretly. Some believe the problem is very serious; others believe it's
overblown. But in the last few years reports to law-enforcement officials have
increased, and clergy, parents, school administrators, and mental-health
professionals have deluged resource organizations with requests for information
and educational materials. The American Family Foundation (AFF) believes
teachers and school staff should know about occult rituals, be aware of the
danger signs and the general profile of youngsters who might become involved, be
able to assess the seriousness of occult-ritual involvements of their students,
and know where to turn for additional information and assistance.
When presenting material about occult rituals to youngsters one must be very
careful to do it in a way that does not make these activities sound attractive.
Some believe this material should be given only to parents, teachers, and school
staff, and not to the youngsters themselves. However, AFF believes it should be
presented responsibly to students also, emphasizing the potential harm and
dangers of these practices.
The student text of this lesson plan does not include a listing of general
personality characteristics of young people who participate in occult rituals or
a list of danger signals. They are listed below for you. Refer also to the
article "Satanism and Occult-Ritual Activity: Questions and Answers" in the AFF
handout Cults & Mind Control. For a fuller discussion, see the book
Satanism and Occult-Related Violence: What You Should Know by Michael D.
Langone, Ph.D. and Linda O. Blood, which you can obtain from AFF (see Page 9).
Characteristics of Youngsters Involved with Occult Rituals
The general personality profile of youngsters who might become involved with
occult rituals differs from that of the general profile of a cult member. Young
people who get recruited into cults are often high achievers and model students;
youngster who might become involved with occult rituals are often:
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Alienated, troubled teens or pre-teens with low
self-esteem who exhibit problems with aggressive behavior and/or suicidal
tendencies, both of which can be aggravated by involvement in occult rituals;
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often come from dysfunctional families;
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Bright, creative, and intellectually curious; but
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Usually underachievers and loners who do poorly in
school and/or have learning disabilities
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May be bored and rebellious, but may also feel the
need to belong and may be vulnerable to influence by strong, charismatic
personalities
Signs of Possible Involvement with Occult Rituals
[Please note: It's important not to jump to conclusions. Many of these signs,
in and of themselves, have nothing to do with occult-ritual participation and
may be associated with other types of problems. Look at the whole picture and
remember that destructive occult-ritual involvement will often be associated
with, if not in fact result from, more traditional psychological problems such
as low self-esteem, depression, alienation, etc. Not all of the factors listed
below need to be present in order to indicate possible involvement, and any one
factor present alone needn't indicate possible involvement. Also, it may not be
possible to observe some of these factors even if they are present.]
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Diminished intellectual ability, falling
grades, drug and/or alcohol abuse |
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Accumulating occult ritual paraphernalia, such
as books about Satan, witchcraft, the occult, etc., knives and other
weapons, whips, black or red candles and robes, bones, posters depicting
sex, violence, or occult images |
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Use of occult signs and symbols in jewelry,
sewn on clothing, or drawn on papers, books, or walls |
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Preoccupation with silver jewelry |
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Developing an obsession with movies, videos,
books, and heavy-metal music with themes of occultism and demonism,
violence, rape, mutilation, suicide, and death |
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Obsession with fantasy role-playing games;
obsession with ouija boards and/or tarot cards and means of predicting the
future |
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Displaying signs of ritualistic mutilation such
as unexplained cuts on the left arm or chest area, especially if these are
in the form of occult symbols; tattoos, excessive piercing of ears or
other parts of the body |
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Maintaining a "book of shadows" -- a notebook
in which rituals and other activities are recorded |
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Use of inverted religious symbols such as an
upside-down cross |
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Preoccupation with suicide and with death,
particularly the morbid side of it, perhaps expressed verbally or through
dress, drawings, poetry, or music |
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Participation in antisocial, violent, and/or
criminal acts |
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Deterioration in physical health |
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Making a pact to sell one's soul to Satan in
return for power, money, fame, and success |
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Adopting unusual nicknames, especially if
related to the occult, horror movies, and fantasy role-playing games |
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Belief by youngster that he/she is possessed by
demons |
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Alienation from family and old friends;
secretiveness about new friends and activities |
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Unexplained disappearances, especially at night |
Lesson Plan Objectives
See page 1 of the student text. An additional objective is to provide you
with resources for further information and assistance for both you and the
students.
Educational Methods
In keeping with its primary objective of encouraging critical thinking and
evaluation skills, this lesson plan emphasizes questioning and class discussion,
provides thought-provoking questions and discussion projects, and encourages
students to contribute their ideas and experiences.
How to Use this Lesson Plan
If you copy the student text for your students, in keeping with copyright
regulations we ask that you reproduce the entire page of every page used,
including the copyright notice on the bottom of the page.
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Administer the pre-test from the student text
before you begin the unit to help students assess how much they know about
cults and psychological manipulation. Assure them they're not being graded and
their answers will be seen by no one else.
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Distribute the Cults & Mind Control handout
as homework and ask students to read it before you begin the class work
together. Students are instructed to re-read specific articles relating to
specific sections of the lesson plan when that specific subject matter comes
up later in the lesson plan.
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If you have obtained the AFF videotape "Cults:
Saying No Under Pressure," show it at the beginning of the lesson. It provides
a good introduction to the topic and will stimulate interest and discussion.
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If you have obtained Cults: Questions & Answers,
use the material in it to supplement the abridged version found in the handout
Cults & Mind Control and in the lesson plan. Especially useful is the
detailed definition of cults, discussions of different types of groups, the
changes of personality cult members undergo, how cults can harm people and
society, and how people leave cults.
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Administer the post-test from the student text at
the end of the lesson plan so you and your students can assess what's been
gained from it.
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Some of the words and terms used in this lesson
plan will be unfamiliar to your students. Many of the concepts are
sophisticated and are difficult even for adults to understand. Urge your
students to refer to the alphabetized glossary of the student text, where
difficult words and terms are defined as clearly as possible. Where necessary,
define them further in class.
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Ask students to fill out their evaluation forms in
the student text and collect them.
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In order to build up your own active file on cults
and psychological manipulation, cut out articles you find in newspapers and
magazines and put them in a special notebook, or print articles you find on
the Internet. This will assist you in using the lesson plan in the future and,
when you share the articles with your students, will illustrate to them how
the cult scene constantly changes. Check your local radio and TV listings for
programs on cults. Tell your students to listen to/watch them and talk about
them in class afterwards. This will illustrate how prominent cults are in the
news today and will help to update you and your students on their activities.
As a follow-up exercise for the rest of the year ask your students to clip out
and bring to class stories about cults and psychological manipulation they
spot in newspapers and magazines or to report to the class about stories on
radio and TV.
Lesson Plan Time Frame
This lesson plan is designed to be taught over three to five class sessions.
Following is a suggested breakdown of subjects covered in this lesson plan into
a three-day, four-day, and five-day time frame:
Three-day time frame:
If the AFF videotape "Cults: Saying No Under Pressure" is purchased
- Day 1 - Pre-test, AFF videotape, What is a Cult?
- Day 2 - The Harm Cults Can Cause, Mind Control and Psychological
Manipulation
- Day 3 - Saying "No" to Mind Control and Psychological Manipulation, Occult
Rituals, Post-test
If AFF videotape is not purchased
- Day 1 - Pre-test, What is a Cult?, The Harm Cults Can Cause
- Day 2 - Mind Control and Psychological Manipulation
- Day 3 - Saying "No" to Mind Control and Psychological Manipulation, Occult
Rituals, Post-test
Four-day time frame:
- Day 1 - Pre-test, AFF videotape, What is a Cult?
- Day 2 - The Harm Cults Can Cause, Mind Control and Psychological
Manipulation
- Day 3 - Saying "No" to Mind Control and Psychological Manipulation
- Day 4 - Occult Rituals, Post-test, summary
Five-day time frame:
- Day 1 - Pre-test, AFF videotape, What is a Cult?
- Day 2 - The Harm Cults Can Cause, Mind Control and Psychological
Manipulation
- Day 3 - Mind Control and Psychological Manipulation (continued),
Saying "No" to Mind Control and Psychological Manipulation
- Day 4 - Saying "No" to Mind Control and Psychological Manipulation
(continued)
- Day 5 - Occult Rituals, Post-test, summary
Contents of Student Text
The following topics are covered in the student text. We do not give page
numbers, for in a Web version these may vary depending upon your browser.
Introduction
What is a Cult?
The Harm Cults Can Cause
Mind Control and Psychological Manipulation
Saying "No" to Mind Control and Psychological Manipulation
Occult Rituals
How to Avoid Getting Into a Cult and Getting Involved in Occult Rituals
Supplementary Writing Project
Post-Test
Student Evaluation
Ordering of Additional Materials
We intend to make all of our preventive educational material (except videos)
available on our Web site so that teachers, clergy, and others can download the
resources free. If, however, you want to purchase printed copies of the
material, contact AFF to inquire about availability and prices.
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