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MYP Humanities Unit 1: Psychology Week 2 9/8-9/11 Tuesday, September 8, 2009 • Library Orientation • No Class. • Get library orientation materials from Ms. Johnson. Wednesday, September 9, 2009 Objectives: Students will identify and explain the major developmental schools of psychological theory by comparing and contrasting their perspectives. Opener: Complete library quiz from yesterday’s packet. Activities: 1) Complete opener. Review. Turn in. 2) Class Activity: Optical illusions. 3) Notes and Discussion: History of Psychology Homework: Read “Contemporary Perspectives” and take notes. Answer questions at the end. What does it say? Do you see the man’s face? History of Psychology The foundations Structuralism • • • • • William Wundt (“Vundt”) European school of thought First psychological laboratory Introspection – look within Process: – Use senses to describe something – Recall emotional experiences related to something – Break down consciousness to its smallest parts Structuralism • Problems: – Research was done by selfreporting – Act of recalling something automatically changes the experience – Everyone had unique experiences, hard to make generalizations – Highly subjective Structuralism • Describe IN DETAIL the candy and then eating the candy with all 5 senses. (touch, sound, look, color, act of chewing, taste) • Describe how eating the candy made you feel, what it made you think about. Thursday, September 10, 2009 Objectives: Students will analyze major schools of psychological thought by comparing and contrasting their methods of analyzing human behavior. Opener: What is structuralism? What are the problems with it? Activities: 1) Have homework ready to be stamped. 2) Complete Opener. Review. 3) Copy Homework. 4) Class Activity: Optical Illusions 5) Notes and Discussion: Functionalism, Behaviorism, Psychoanalysis Homework: Write words and definitions into your glossaries (LOOK UP the definitions in your notes – words are on the next slide). Glossary Terms • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • IB Learner Profile (know the characteristics) Intelligence Multiple Intelligences IQ Alfred Binet Howard Gardner Lewis Terman William Stern Aptitude Achievement Behaviorism Psychoanalysis Introspection John Watson BF Skinner • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Bodily-kinesthetic Verbal-linguistic Logical-mathematical Interpersonal Intrapersonal Musical Visual-spatial Naturalistic Learning disability William Wundt James Wilson Sigmund Freud Structuralism Functionalism Functionalism • William James • Opposed to structuralism • Believed you could not break down consciousness to analyze from within • Sought to understand how behavior/consciousness worked together to help people adapt and survive in their environments. • Helped establish more scientific research methods (observation, survey) • American school (pragmatism) Functionalism • Did you like the candy? Why or why not? • What foods do you dislike and why? • Is there a food you’ve ever had that made you sick? Did you ever eat it again? • What might that reaction help you stay alive? Friday, September 11, 2009 Objectives: Students will analyze the history of psychology by comparing and contrasting different perspectives. Opener: What is functionalism? How is it different from structuralism? Activities: 1) Complete opener. Review opener. 2) Copy Homework. 3) Class Activity: Optical Illusions 4) Notes/Discussion: Psychoanalysis, Behaviorism Homework: Finish entering words in glossary. Study. Complete questions on review sheet. Test on Tuesday. Psychoanalysis • Based in structuralism • Focused on the conscious mind and the interaction between the conscious and the unconscious • Ego (social expectations), Superego (own decision making), Id (unconscious) Psychoanalyis • Where you ever told to not eat a piece of candy before dinner? (social expectations) • Did you take the candy anyway in order to gratify yourself (the id– not because you needed it)? • How did that make you feel? Behaviorism • John Watson, B.F.Skinner, Ivan Pavlov • Behavior is the result of a response to stimuli (positive or negative reinforcement) Behaviorism • If I give you a piece of candy every time you raise your hand, will you be more motivated to raise your hand? What if I give you a piece of candy not every time, but randomly? • You want more candy (because of the positive reinforcement) or you never want to have that candy again (because of the negative reinforcement). Pavlov – Classical conditioning • Classical Conditioning – Unconditional stimulus – Unconditional response – Conditioned stimulus – Conditioned response Skinner –Operant Conditioning • Operant Conditioning: response to rewards and punishments • Only look at observable causes for behavior