Friday, 30 September 2011
Capacity & Encoding
An in-depth look and replication of Baddeley (1966), which most of us managed to get our heads round by the end of the lesson. You need to be consolidating the material learnt now after every lesson. This means reading over your class notes and then the relevant section in your textbook, amending your notes as necessary, and checking it all makes sense. Look in other texts if necessary - there are plenty in the sixth form study room. Test yourself with the summary questions in the textbook. A VERY useful document including answers to the summary questions and a glossary is here.
Thursday, 22 September 2011
Duration in long-term memory
We discussed how good long-term memory is, and the difficulties of studying it. The Bahrick study ppt is here.
We also had a first look at some past exam papers. If you go to the AQA website and find our course (Psychology A grouped under Sciences), then you will find lots of past exam papers and mark schemes under the 'key materials' tab. I'd post a link but I want you to be able to find it yourself as it's such a great resource.
The Cognitive Approach
Yesterday we spent some time introducing key debates in Psychology. It would be helpful for you to do some reading about these here:
Nature Nurture;
Reductionism;
Science.
Nature Nurture;
Reductionism;
Science.
Our third approach is the Cognitive - this is probably the hardest to pin down to a simple explanation. It focuses on the mind, but not the subconscious drives and memories of the Psychodynamic approach. Instead it treats the brain as a computer, and studies how it processes and stores information. Like the behavioural approach it deals with stimuli and responses to them, but suggests that we need to study the mental processes (like thinking) that take place between these.
Here is the presentation. and some useful reading, and some more.
We will have a test on these approaches, including the biological approach which we will look at on Friday, next Wednesday 28th September.
Tuesday, 20 September 2011
More research methods
Hopefully you're beginnning to get the hang of some of the RM terminology now. You need to know these terms inside out:
Independent variable
Dependent variable
Directional hypotheses
Non-directional hypotheses
Operationalisation
I've put an electronic version of the red RM booklet here.
Thursday, 15 September 2011
The man who keeps falling in love with his wife
Today we started to discuss how we might define memory. We looked at the case of Clive Wearing with severe anterograde amnesia. The video we watched is here and some other info, including Clive's history, is here.
We also carried out an experiment into the duration of short term memory with some interesting results. We then ventured into research methods for the first time and defined aims, hypotheses (directional & non-directional) and dependent and independent variables. You must know these terms. The powerpoints used are here and here (you'll be relieved to know you can ignore the last two slides of the second powerpoint).
Tuesday, 13 September 2011
Freud - theory of personality and its evaluation
We spent a lesson on Tuesday looking at Freud's rather complicated theory of the development of personality through stages of psychosexual development during childhood. You should have notes in the format set out below, including the key terms and concepts given, by next lesson on Tuesday. If you've already got this clearly in your holiday work on Freud you don't need to duplicate it, but you do need to know it! Here is the presentation used in the lesson.
Definitions: personality / psychodynamic
Tripartite personality:
Define id / ego / superego
Define conscious / subconscious
Psychosexual development:
List stages / outline Oedipus complex and penis envy / outline concepts of fixation and regression
Defence Mechanisms:
Explain concept / give examples including denial and repression
We spend the second lesson looking at evidence we can use to evaluate Freud's theory - you can download the cards we used here. For next Tuesday you need to choose some of these ideas to write an evaluation of Freud's theory. This should include an explanation of both positive and negative criticisms, leading to a conclusion of your own - 1/2 to 2/3 of a side if you're handwriting is enough, but it needs to be carefully and clearly written.
My evaluation of Freud's theory in one sentence: "Many of the details of Freud's theory are not scientifically testable and therefore not trustworthy, but some big ideas like the unconscious are very valuable, and it 'opened the door' to other psychological explanations of personality, behaviour and abnormality."
Definitions: personality / psychodynamic
Tripartite personality:
Define id / ego / superego
Define conscious / subconscious
Psychosexual development:
List stages / outline Oedipus complex and penis envy / outline concepts of fixation and regression
Defence Mechanisms:
Explain concept / give examples including denial and repression
We spend the second lesson looking at evidence we can use to evaluate Freud's theory - you can download the cards we used here. For next Tuesday you need to choose some of these ideas to write an evaluation of Freud's theory. This should include an explanation of both positive and negative criticisms, leading to a conclusion of your own - 1/2 to 2/3 of a side if you're handwriting is enough, but it needs to be carefully and clearly written.
My evaluation of Freud's theory in one sentence: "Many of the details of Freud's theory are not scientifically testable and therefore not trustworthy, but some big ideas like the unconscious are very valuable, and it 'opened the door' to other psychological explanations of personality, behaviour and abnormality."
Sunday, 11 September 2011
First Lesson - What is Psychology?
"Poets are masters of us ordinary men, in knowledge of the mind, because they drink at streams which we have not yet made accessible to science." — Sigmund Freud
Welcome to the 12e Psychology Blog. We spent some time in today's lesson talking about what psychology is. A tidy textbook definition is the study of 'mind and behaviour'. Sometimes this is given as the 'science of mind and behaviour' but this is controversial due to the difficulties of experimenting on people (it often isn't practical or ethical to manipulate them the way we'd like to) and directly observing their thoughts. BUT, Freud's 'streams' are being made more accessible to science by new technologies such as fMRI (functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging).
The holiday task, looking at Freud's theory of personality, why it is widely believed to be wrong, and why it is still highly influential despite this, is to be completed by Tuesday's lesson, if you haven't already. Here's a link to the subject information sheet which has it on the bottom.
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