ms. beetson 3018 ib psychology 2012-2013. who are we? find someone who… mnemonic technique in...
TRANSCRIPT
Ms. Beetson3018
IB PSYCHOLOGY2012-2013
Who are we?
•Find someone who…
•Mnemonic technique in action
Essential Questions•W
hat does the IB psych course look like?
•What are my responsibilities as an IB Psychology student?
•What is the definition of psychology?
•What are the main areas of psychology and how has it developed over time?
Course expectations•O
n the card, write down:1
)Your name, and some important information about yourself you feel I should know?
2) What you expect to gain from this course?
3)What you think your responsibilities are as a psychology student?
4)What personal learning strategies will you use to ensure you do well in this course?
What's psychology all about?•O
n a piece of binder paper:-
1)Write a definition of psychology
2)Write down three things that you know about how we behave
3)Write down how you know those things?
You can work in pairs
In threes – discuss what this microscope symbolizes, and summarize on the samesheet
What is psychology?
Extension activity : sketch this diagram
What is psychology?•P
sychology is the systematic study of behaviour and mental processes. Psychology has its roots in both the natural and social sciences, leading to a variety of research designs and applications, and providing a unique approach to understanding modern society.
•IB psychology examines the interaction of biological, cognitive and sociocultural influences on human behaviour, thereby adopting an integrative approach.
•Understanding how psychological knowledge is generated, developed and applied enables students to achieve a greater understanding of themselves and appreciate the diversity of human behaviour.
•The ethical concerns raised by the methodology and application of psychological research are key considerations in IB psychology.
Classroom scavenger hunt
1) What are some of the important questions surrounding the study of cognition?
2) What are some of the functions of the frontal lobe of the brain?
3) What are our five senses?4) How many neurons are there in the brain?5) What is the myeline sheath?6) What are two key social psychological questions?7) What is abnormal psychology?8) How might brain imaging be used in criminal cases?9) What is at the middle of every neuron?10) Who was the 1st psychological humanist?11) Name two early child psychologists.12) What are “smart” drugs?13) What is cognition?14) What part of the brain might shrink after PTSD?
Look at the posters and articles in 3018 and answer the following:
What Psychology isn’t….
• Open your textbooks to page 8 and read the section ‘Pop Psych & Psychobabble’ and answer these questions
1. How is the term pop psych used?2. What is psychobabble?3. What is the difference between scientific
psychology and pop psychology?4. What type of psychology will we be
studying on this course?
Some pop psych myths….
•Myth #1 : We Only Use 10% of our Brains
•Myth #2 : Human Memory Works like a Video Camera
•Myth #3 : Opposites Attract
•Myth #4: Full Moons Cause Crimes and Craziness
•Myth #5: People with Schizophrenia Have Multiple Personalities
The History of Psychology•M
onday: group poster production and research•T
uesday & Thursday: mini presentations on the posters•T
hursday: paragraph summary – minor assessment
The History of Psychology
philosophy
biology
physics When did psychology
start?1879
psychoanalysis
Behaviorism
cognitive
biological
sociocultural1800s
Definition of psychology
Where did psychology come from?
How did psychology develop?
1900-40s 1940s present
APA format citations….
Check your planners (p68) for information about APA formatting.
Here’s an example:
Hill, G. (2001). Psychology Through Diagrams. Oxford: Oxford University Press
You can also use www.bibme.org – this is a piece of software which creates references for you
Writing a summary… •Y
our task is to write two paragraphs (approximately 300 words total) the first paragraph should be a summary of the History of Psychology based on the work we have done as a class:
•Make sure you have a clear topic sentence at the beginning of your paragraph which states what you will write about in that paragraph
•The paragraph on the history of psychology is a ‘sequential paragraph’ - Start with the earliest influences on psychology and then take it through the three main levels of analysis studied today (about 200 words)
•The second paragraph should be a reflection on the first two weeks of psychology in terms of the process of completing the poster task and presentation and your general feelings about the course at this stage. (about 100 words)
•You can write the paragraphs in MS word, and then email to [email protected]
Connect in your team as quick as possible
Quick Quiz1) What is the definition of psychology?2) What date is commonly seen as the start of
modern psychology?3) State how Philosophy has influenced Psychology4) Give one major contribution from the field of
Biology to the psychology5) The psychoanalysts emphasized the importance of
the u__________s mind when attempting to understand human behavior
6) Name a famous Psychologist from the psychodynamic approach to understanding behavior
7) What did the behaviorists emphasize the need to study?
8) What are the three main levels of analysis in modern psychology?
9) When did cognitive psychology begin to develop?10) What are the differences between the three levels
of analysis?
The Scientific Method
•(from Latin: scientia, meaning "knowledge") is a systematic enterprise of gathering knowledge about the world and organizing and condensing that knowledge into testable laws and theories. (Wilson, 1999)
DEFINTION: Science
Research in Psychology
•Psychology is one of the human sciences, so psychology uses empirical (scientific) methodology in order to gather data about behavior
•Question – looking at the history of psychology which areas do you think use the scientific method?
•Psychologists apply the scientific method to the study of behavior – but it is not without its problems……..
Chocolate increases cognitive performance
•A West Virginia professor has good news for chocoholics -- eating chocolate improves memory, reaction time and cognitive ability.
•In 2006 Dr. Bryan Raudenbush of Wheeling Jesuit University led the study, "Effects of Chocolate Consumption on Enhancing Cognitive Performance," Reliable Plant reported. He found that subjects who had consumed either milk chocolate or dark chocolate 15 minutes before they were tested performed better than those given carob or nothing at all.
•"These findings provide support for nutrient release via chocolate consumption to enhance cognitive performance," Raudenbush said.
Carrying out psychological research
•So now in groups, imagine you want to carry out an experiment to investigate the effect of ‘chocolate on STM performance’
•How would you carry out research to find out about this?
Short-term Memory• Selective attention determines what information moves from sensory memory to short-term memory. STM is most often stored as sounds, especially in recalling words, but may be stored as images. STM can be transferred to LTM though rehearsal.
• Limited capacity and duration: Works like RAM memory in computers; provides a working space. Is thought to be 7 bits in length, that is, we normally only remember 7 items (Miller, 1956).
• Let’s try the STM Visual Memory Task to see if this is true. – You have 1 minuteto look at the following picture and remember as many objects as possible.
Visual Short-term Memory
•Now write down the names of all the objects you can remember.
•How many objects did you remember?
Evaluation in Psychology
MCEG
MethodologyCulture Ethics
Gender
Controls? Variables?Reliability (is it replicable/ is it a consistent measure?)?Validity? (does it measureWhat it is supposed to measure?)Ecological andCross cultural) ?
From whatculture arethe PPs?Is it generalisable?
Are PPs protectedfrom psychologicaland physical harm?Informed consent & debreifing?APA Guidelines followed?
Equal no of M & FPPs?Can results beGeneralised?
Points to consider when evaluating research
1. Is the study based on a representative group of people (sample)?
2. Was the study conducted in a laboratory or in a natural setting?
3. Where what the participants where asked to do far from real life?
4. Are the findings of the study supported by the findings of other studies?
5. Do the findings have a practical relevance?
6. Ethical considerations
Weekly Lesson Objectives
•Examine the schema theory from the cognitive level of analysis and a key study from this field
•Develop your understanding of experimental and non experiential methods in psychology
•Practice unpacking question and writing a response to an 8 mark SAQ question
Sampling Methods
1. What are participants?2. What is a representative sample? 3. What is opportunity sampling & what are its
strengths and weaknesses?4. What is a self selected sample and what are its
strengths & weaknesses?5. What is snowball sampling and what are its
strengths and weaknesses?6. What is random sampling & what are its
strengths and weaknesses?7. What is stratified sampling & what are its
strengths and weaknesses?
APA (American Psychological Association) Ethical Guidelines
1. Why are ethical guidelines particularly important when carrying out psychological research?
2. What is informed consent and why is it important?
3. What is debriefing and why is it important?4. What is the right to withdraw and why is it
important?5. What is participant confidentiality and why is
it important?6. What is protection from psychological and
physical harm and why is it important?**use examples to enhance your explanation of these ethical guidelines**
Reliability & Validity
1. Why should we consider whether research has applications?
2. What is cross cultural validity?
3. What is ecological validity?
4. What is reliability?
**use examples to enhance your explanation of reliability and validity**
Six questions to ask when evaluating research
1. Is the study based on a representative group of people (sample)?
2. Was the study conducted in a laboratory or in a natural setting?
3. Where what the participants where asked to do far from real life?
4. Are the findings of the study supported by the findings of other studies?
5. Do the findings have a practical relevance?
6. Ethical considerations
**use examples to enhance your explanation of these questions**
•Copy the picture of a chair that the previous person has drawn…
•This is called serial reproduction… it changes… and our existing schemas influence these changes
•Now read the story on page 83 out loud…
•This is called repeated reproduction..
Research in Cognitive Psychology
Research Methods: Quick quiz1.W
hat type of relationship between variables does an experiment aim to establish?
2.What does IV and DV stand for? and what relationship between these is examined in an experiment?
3.What is a hypothesis?
4.Give one strength and one limitation of laboratory experiments
5.What is the difference between a field and laboratory experiment?
6.Explain what is meant by demand characteristics
7.What are confounding variables, and why are they a problem for experiments?
8.What is the difference between a positive and negative correlation?
9.What is one of the main weaknesses of correlational studies?
10.What is one of the strengths of qualitative research?
11.What is a strength and a limitation of participant observations?
12.How is a structured interview different from a unstructured interview?
13.What are some of the limitations of interviews?
14.What does triangulation mean?
15.What is a case study?
Key evaluation point: Culture
•Culture can be defined as the human made part of the living environment. It refers to shared values. Human beings create culture and are also influenced by it.
•(It is both subjective – attitudes, beliefs norms & objective – literature, poetry, cooking pots, weapons)
•In the psychology cultural bias can occur in may ways: Researchers/ theorists may ignore the influence of culture or see all of human life through the perspective of one culture.
Cultural considerations in psychology
•Moghaddam (1993) Humans have an ‘interactive’ relationship with culture – we shape culture and we are also shaped by it
•Jahoda (1978) believes that ‘Cultural Evolution’ rather than ‘Biological Evolution’ the reason for our progress and civilization today
•The danger is that many Psychologists adopt the ‘universal man’ assumption – We are all the same – culture does not influence our behaviour
•Smith & Bond (1998) found that Psychology is Ethnocentric (western centred)– they reviewed textbooks and found that only 10% of the world is sampled in psychological research
•Cultural relativists believe culture is important vs. absolutists believe that our biology most important in determining our behavior
Most scientific research is carried out in the west…..
Triandis (1990) ‘dimensions of cultural diversity’
•Differences between cultures, that can be seen in terms of:
1) Cultural complexity
•The more complex/ industrialised/technological the culture, the more people must pay attention to time – west – time is linear, eastern cultures - circular
2) Individualistic (independent) (behaviour based on likes & dislikes, identity defined by personal choices) vs. collectivist (interdependent) (saving face, self as an extension to the group, identity defined by the characteristics of the group) dimensions
Triandis(1990) dimensions of cultural diversity
3) Tight (e.g. Japan, Korea - homogenous) vs. loose cultures (UK, America – multi-cultural)
4) In addition to these, Triandis also discusses the more specific dimensions:
•emotional control vs. emotional expressiveness
•contact vs. non contact
•Horizontal vs. vertical relationships
•Ethnocentric research does not take these differences into account
Culture: Quick Quiz – in pairs1. What is culture?2. What does Moghaddam (1993) say about an ‘interactive
relationship’ with culture?3. What is Jahoda (1978) referring to when he mentions ‘Cultural
evolution’?4. What did Smith & Bond (1998) discover about psychology
textbooks? How does this relate to ethnocentrism?5. Give an example of an independent culture and an
interdependent culture6. What is the main difference between independent and
interdependent cultures?7. What explanation did people from independent and
interdependent cultures give for the fishes behavior in last lessons study? Explain why this is so
8. What differences did Marcus & Kitayama find between American and Japanese students descriptions of themselves? What did they sight as some of the reasons for these differences?
9. In what countries is most of the research carried out in psychology? Why might this be a problem?
10. Do you think that psychologists should be aware of culture? why?
How culture influences the way we see the world…..