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Do Now. Start on the worksheet you picked up on your way in. I also need you to pull out your BUDDY and place it in front of you while you work. I’m checking numbers. This is a WPS grade and if your book is missing, it will cost you $115. 1.1 Review: History and Approaches.
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Do Now Start on the worksheet you picked up on your way in. I also need you to pull outyour BUDDY and place itin front of you while you work. I’m checking numbers. This is a WPS grade and if your book ismissing, it will cost you $115.
1.1 Review: History and Approaches Today, I will be able to… Meet all of the Unit 1 Objectives.
Agenda • Do Now • Unit 1 Review • 1.1: History and Approaches • 1.2: Research Methods • Review Game (if time) • Homework: • Bring questions tomorrow for Unit 2 Review • Notecards (Wed, 10/9) • Q1 Portfolio (Tues, 10/15)
Announcements • 14 people have tried the DNQ online. • 4 people have passed. • 1 person passed on her first try. • DO NOT REFRESH!! • Student work has been separated into folders. • Extra Credit – Study Guides
History • Pre-psychology • Plato/Socrates vs. Aristotle • Descartes: Dualism; innate ideas • Locke: tabula rasa • The origin of psychology • Who created the first psychology laboratory in the world? • What did Wilhelm Wundt contribute to psychology? • What were the first two schools of psychology? • Who made them? • What were their beliefs?
History 1879 Late 1800s Early 1900s 1920s 1960s 1980s • First Psychology Lab • First two schools of psychology • Coming out of the Victorian Era • Seeing what cannot be seen • “Dark Ages” of Psychology • Cognitive Revolution • Willpower, freedom, and love • Modern Perspectives
Approaches Thinking back to our CELEBRITY activity, can each approach provide a complete explanation for a person’s behavior? Hence, the multi-factorial approach. • Structuralism • Functionalism • Behaviorism • Gestalt • Psychoanalysis • Humanism • Evolutionary/Biological • Cognitive • Socio-Cultural
Matching!! • Abraham Maslow • Ivan Pavlov • Margaret Washburn • G. Stanley Hall • Mary Calkins • John B. Watson • Carl Rogers • Edward Titchener • Harry Harlow • Wilhelm Wundt • Client-Centered Therapy; Humanist. • Affection studies with monkeys. • First woman Ph.D. in Psychology • First woman president of APA • First laboratory in the world • First laboratory in the United States • Little Albert (Conditioning) • Salivating Dogs (Conditioning) • Hierarchy of Needs • Founded Structuralism
Matching!! • Abraham Maslow • Ivan Pavlov • Margaret Washburn • G. Stanley Hall • Mary Calkins • John B. Watson • Carl Rogers • Edward Titchener • Harry Harlow • Wilhelm Wundt • Client-Centered Therapy; Humanist. • Affection studies with monkeys. • First woman Ph.D. in Psychology • First woman president of APA • First laboratory in the world • First laboratory in the United States • Little Albert (Conditioning) • Salivating Dogs (Conditioning) • Hierarchy of Needs • Founded Structuralism
Matching!! • Abraham Maslow • Ivan Pavlov • Margaret Washburn • G. Stanley Hall • Mary Calkins • John B. Watson • Carl Rogers • Edward Titchener • Harry Harlow • Wilhelm Wundt I H C F D G A J B E
Matching!! • Abraham Maslow • Ivan Pavlov • Margaret Washburn • G. Stanley Hall • Mary Calkins • John B. Watson • Carl Rogers • Edward Titchener • Harry Harlow • Wilhelm Wundt I. Hierarchy of Needs H. Salivating Dogs (Conditioning) C. First woman Ph.D. in Psychology F. First laboratory in the United States D. First woman president of APA G. Little Albert (Conditioning) A. Client-Centered Therapy; Humanist. J. Founded Structuralism B. Affection studies with monkeys. E. First laboratory in the world
Time to move on to 1.2 review. Flip to a new page in your notes.