Thursday, December 14, 2017

EXTRA CREDIT OVER BREAK

Extra Credit for Semester 1
Option #1--Most Points
Extra Credit Project:

* Research a person, place or thing that is important to the study of Psychology. After researching, for 25 pts. you may do one of the following:

A. Write a 5 page paper explaining what this topic is about. Explain why knowledge of this topic is important to the study of psychology.

B. Write a 2 page paper and do Do a 15 slide PPT. 

A bibliography is necessary to validate your research. (2 Sources Minimum--using APA format)
Aformal presentation to the class on the date which we return 

Option 2--For 15 pts. you may do one of the following:

1. Watch a psychology movie or documentary about a topic relevant to psych (do not use a movie from the class) and write up a review (1-2 pages typed).  APA Format.
2. Read an article from a newspaper or periodical that is significant and write up a summary (with article attached)---1 to 2 pages typed. APA Format

HAVE A GREAT XMAS BREAK!
Extra Credit is due for 3rd on 1/2 and 6th on 1/3.

Unit 3--Learning and Cognition

Learning and Cognition
Post Thanksgiving Break until 12/14-15

Friday, October 27, 2017

10/30-11/9 Sensation and Perception

Mod. 16-21 Reading are Assigned.  Module Reading Quizzes may happen at any time.

Sensation and Perception Quiz will be on 11/8-9.


10/16-27 Biological Basis of Behavior

Biological Basis of Behavior

Mod 9-15 for Reading.

Reading Quizzes are Due at Any Time

Thursday, September 28, 2017

9/28 Research

9/28--
1. Collect Drunk Driving and Marriage Studies Wkst.
2. 15pt. Quiz on Mod 4-8.
3. Correlational Wkst.

4. Group Project---
In groups explain a study that you would come up with and what the hypothesis would be.

In your group explain an experiment that you would do and define the hypothesis, the Independent Variable and Dependent Variable and what your method would be.

9/7 Origins of Psychology

9/7-18 History and Origins of Psychology.  Mod 1-3
Origins Quiz 9/18
Syllabus Due 9/14

9/19-20-28  Research Methodolgy

Exp. Wkst. and IV/DV Wkst. Due on 9/25


Tuesday, September 5, 2017

9/6 Intro to AP Psych.

Welcome to AP Psych.  You will need a Notebook and a Section of your 3-ring Binder just for this class.

Monday, May 8, 2017

5/8--Superheroes

Worked on Superheroes project. Due on 5/9

Discussed the Hawthorne Studies and applications of Psychology.

We will be watching the Stanford Prison Experiment in class.
If you want to view Dr. Zimbardo's grand experiment backfire, please feel out the following by Thursday 5/11.

AP Psychology---

I give my child, _________________________________________, permission to watch the movie “The Stanford Prison Experiment” in class on 5/11 and 5/15-16.  I realize that the movie is rated R, but I believe that the content is important to the understanding of Social Psychology.

___________________________________________________     Date______________________
                Parent Signature




Tuesday, May 2, 2017

5/1-4 AP Equivalent and New SuperHero Assignment

Those who took the AP EXAM---Catch your breath with quiet study time for all of 5/2 and 1/2 of 5/4.

Those who did not--you are taking the equivalent EXAM.

5/2--100MC Test in 70minutes

5/4---2 FRQ's in 50 minutes

After the Exam---Design a new SuperHero

5/1 AP EXAM!

Crush the AP EXAM!!!

100 MC in 70 minutes===No Sweat.

2 FRQ's in 50 minutes= We eat those for Breakfast!!!

4/20-27 Prep for AP EXAM

Group Breakouts and Kahoot Making.

FRQ Practice (ICAE)--

Identify the Concept

Clarify---Define what the concept means to Psychology

Apply---Apply the concept to the FRQ (Use it in the scenario of the question)

Explain---Explain how the concept fits into the FRQ

4-11-20 Therapies

Discuss Insight/Cognitive/Behavioral and Medical Models of Therapy

Quiz on Disorders and Treatments

Tuesday, February 28, 2017

2/27-8 Social Psychology

Mod 74---Intro to Attitudes/Attributions
FAE
Persuasion

Role Playing---Stanford Prison Experiment (Philip Zimbardo)

Cognitive Dissonance---

Mod 75 ---
Conformity---Asch Experiments on Conformity
2 major types of Conformity

Milgram Experiment on Obedience...

Due on 3/2 (Thursday)

Identify the following:
Automatic mimicry
chameleon effect
mood linkage
conformity
normative social influence
informational social influence

Explain the Asch conformity experiments.
What factors lead to high levels of conformity?
Explain the Milgram experiment.
What factors led to obedience being the highest?
What lessons came from the obedience studies?


2/9-2/23 Development

Development
Mod 45-54
Mod 36 and 37


2/2-2/7 Personality

Mod 58 & 59
Kahoot
MBTI and Review
Personality Quiz

Thursday, February 2, 2017

Site for Test Prep

GREAT SITE FOR TEST PREP

https://www.albert.io/ap-psychology/questions?utm_source=sendy&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=ap-psychology-teacher

1/30-2/2 Personality

Mods 55-59.

Notes on Psychoanalytic View of Personality

Freud---Id/Ego/Superego
Free Association
Unconscious Mind
Def. Mechanisms
Projective Testing---Murray (TAT) Rorschach (Inkblots)
Early Childhood and Psycosexual Development

Neo-Freudians (Psychodynamic)
Jung--Collective Unconscious and Archetypes
Horney--Childhood Anxiety creates Affiliation Needs
Adler---Inferiority Complex

Humanistic--
Rogers--
Genuineness
Acceptance--Unconditional Positive Regard
Empathy

Maslow--Levels of Needs (Heirarchy of Needs)

Trait Theories---
Galen
Meyers and Briggs (Using Jung Typology)
Allport
Eysenck
Cattell

Factor Analysis

CANOE

MMPI
CPI

State(Situation)-Trait(Person) Controversy

Social Cognitive Theory (Bandura)
Reciprocal Determinism

Optimism vs. Pessimism
Positive Psychology







Tuesday, January 24, 2017

ARTICLE ON EXPRESSIVE BEHAVIORS

What's A-O.K. in the U.S.A. Is Lewd and Worthless Beyond
Published: August 18, 1996
·          
The opening session of Bangladesh's new Parliament turned into chaos Sunday after opposition legislators reacted with fury to an alleged offensive thumb gesture by Shipping Minister A.S.M. Abdur Rab.  The gesture is considered a grave insult in Bangladesh.  ''This is a dishonor not only to Parliament but to the nation,'' said the deputy leader of the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party, Badruddoza Chowdhury.  ''The minister must apologize for his showing of the thumb. And the speaker must must ask the minister to do so,'' he said amid shouting from his party colleagues.  WHAT had the shipping minister done to provoke such wrath? He gave the old thumbs-up.
While in the United States, that's just a friendly sign for ''All right!'' or ''Good going!'' in Bangladesh, Australia and other parts of the world, particularly in Islamic countries, that jaunty gesture is the exact equivalent of an upraised middle finger. Yes, it is what is known to generations of high school students as ''flipping the bird.''   That may explain why one American newspaper correspondent's interviews with the random Islamic men on the street inevitably ended with the men furious. The correspondent wound up all of his interviews with a clap on the back, a big grin and a hearty thumbs up.   The thumbs-up is not the only gesture whose meaning an American innocent abroad could mistake. There is a huge array of cross-cultural gaffes to be made. Here are some examples, excerpted from ''Gestures: The Do's and Taboos of Body Language Around the World,'' by Roger E. Axtell (1991, reprinted by permission of the publisher, John Wiley & Sons, Inc.). JOHN KIFNER
The A-O.K.  The ''A-O.K.'' sign, with the thumb and index finger joined in a circle, has insulting and scatological connotations in many Latin American countries. So, when then Vice President Richard M. Nixon, who always had a certain grace problem, landed on one of his trips south of the border in the 1950's and emerged to greet a crowd with both hands up in a double ''A-O.K.,'' he was, in effect, telling the welcomers to -- well, you get the picture.
The A-O.K. does no better elsewhere:  A Frenchman, particularly in the South of France, would read that very same gesture as meaning ''zero'' or ''worthless.'' I once took a hotel room in France and when the concierge asked ''Is your room satisfactory?'' I replied with the ''O.K.'' sign. With a shrug of irritation, the concierge said, ''If you don't like it, we'll just have to find you another room.''  In Japan, the thumb and forefinger making a circle is used as symbol for money . . .
Because of this use, the gesture could have serious consequences when incorrectly used. Imagine a Western businessperson who has negotiated a contract with a Japanese and, at the conclusion, casually makes the O.K. sign . . . The Japanese might say to himself ''Oh! he's giving me the sign for 'money.' . . . Is he asking for a bribe?''
Patting a Child's Head  In India, Sri Lanka and Thailand, patting a child on the head would be shocking and offensive because the head is believed to be the seat of the soul.
'V' for Victory  You think it means ''victory'' or ''peace.'' But that isn't all it means in England:  There, if the palm and fingers face inward, it means 'Up yours!' especially if executed with an upward jerk of the fingers.  There may be a connection between the two meanings that dates back 500 years, when the French used to cut off the middle finger and forefinger of the English archers they captured in battle:  After the battles of Agincourt and Crecy, so the story goes, where the French were heavily defeated by the expert English archers, the surviving French were marched off the battlefield to the taunts of the victorious English. The English added further insult to the French by holding up their hands, forefinger and middle finger stiffly upright, palms inward, to show both fingers fully intact.
The 'Hook 'Em 'Horns' Sign  The ''hook 'em 'Horns'' sign, two outside fingers with the pinky and index finger raised up and the middle two fingers folded down, may be beloved of fans of the University of Texas football team, the Longhorns, and it is a good luck gesture in Brazil and Venezuela. Upsidedown, it is used in American baseball to signify ''two outs.'' But in parts of Africa it is a curse. It is not much appreciated in Italy either:
For millions of Italians it is the cornuto, and it signifies an entirely different meaning. It says, ''You are being cuckolded.'' In more kindly terms, one person is signaling to the other that ''Your spouse is being unfaithful.''
Oh, Waiter!Here the gesture for hailing a waiter is one arm halfway up in the air, sometimes with the index finger slightly raised. But in Japan that is rude. And in Germany it may bring more than you bargained for:  In places like Germany, the signal . . . means ''two,'' because two fingers (one finger and a thumb) are being held upright. So an American might be signaling in this fashion and then saying ''Waiter -- some water, please,'' and a German waiter would bring two glasses of water.To order one glass, try the thumbs-up.
Finger Beckoning  In certain places, scratching the air, hissing and even making kissing noises may be preferable to using another common American gesture, curling the index finger in and out, to beckon a waiter:In countries as widespread as Yugoslavia and Malaysia, that gesture is used only for calling animals. Therefore, using it to beckon a human would be terribly impolite.In Indonesia and Australia, it is also used for beckoning ''ladies of the night.''
Tapping Head With Forefinger  It means ''smart'' here.  In Holland, if the finger is tapped to the center of the forehead, it means ''he's crazy.''
He's Crazy  Rotating the forefinger around in front of the ear has two entirely different meanings. In the United States it usually connotes that someone or something is ''crazy.'' In Argentina, it can be a signal to indicate ''you have a telephone call.''
Stop  Here we know it as the signal for ''Stop!'' or ''That's enough.'' In Greece, it is called the Moutza, or hand push, and it has filthy roots: The moutza reaches back into ancient Greek history when fecal matter and dirt were hurled or pushed into the face of war prisoners. . . . And in West Africa this gesture means ''You could have any one of five fathers!'' which is another way of calling a person a bastard.
Hands in Pockets If you think you can save yourself a load of trouble by simply shoving your hands in your pockets, think again:  Keeping one's hands in one's pockets when conversing in either social or business situations is considered an impolite posture in such diverse locales as Belgium, Indonesia, France, Finland, Japan and Sweden.



Monday, January 23, 2017

1/24-26

Trading Cards Unit 4 DUE!!!

Final Exam---Unit 4 Exam


Over the Break---Read and Take Notes on Mod 55 and 56--Personality.


1/23 Review

Type A and Type B

Review Q's #1-16

Kahoot

Review Units 1-4 for the EXAM

Friday, January 20, 2017

1/20 Mod 44--Stress & Health

Read Mod 44 and Take Cornell Notes

Explain the difference between Type A Personality and Type B Personality.
Explain why Type B Personality is better in considering Heart Conditions

Unit 4 Trading Cards ---Due on 1/24-26.

Final Exam on 1/24 or 1/26---The Final will be 1/2 Unit 4 and 1/2 a cumulation of Unit 1-3.
Prepare by going back through your materials.

1/5-1/18 Motivation/Emotion and Stress

12/1 - 1/5

Unit 3 \Learning and Memory