Clinical Psychologists – treat people w psychological problems (anxiety, schizophrenia) Counseling Psychologists – counsel people with adjustment problems School Psychologists – identify and help people with learning disabilities (individual students) Educational Psychologists – similar but work on school-wide curriculum Developmental Psychologists - changes people undergo (physical, emotional, cognitive, social)
Personality Psychologists – study personality traits Social Psychologists – study social interactions Experimental Psychologists – focus on linking physical (biological) responses with psychological responses
I deal with patients who struggle with anxiety and aggression. If people are having problems with drug abuse, they would come and see me. It is suspected that tainted water may be affecting healthy birth-rates in a specific part of a community. They would call in me to help identify and fix the problem. This type of psychologist would be interested in linking a the body’s reaction to hunger with the brain’s reaction to hunger.
You’re under a lot of stress at work which may be leading to the consistent headaches that you are experiencing. You would want to see a ________________ psychologist. I am doing an experiment at a local bar to observe how men and women interact. What type of psychologist am I? I am designing a new curriculum that will help students become more engaged in learning chemistry. What is my field of expertise? I work with students with specific learning disabilities. What is my area of expertise?
What human behaviors would you most like to know about? Ex. How do children earn right from wrong?
Explain the historical background of the study of psychology.
Using your book or the internet Prepare a 4-5 slide presentation that will teach the rest of the class about the psychologist that you are assigned. Include major achievements or theory associated with your psychologist. Save in apps folder PSYCH- LYON Seth- Wihelm Wundt Nicole– William James Beth—Alfred Adler Marshall– John B. Watson John—B.F. Skinner Bobby Jo—Sigmund Freud
Introspection – looking within Associationism – associating two ideas or events Structuralism – psychology that focuses on the basic elements of consciousness. Focus on introspection Functionalism – studying how mental processes help organisms adapt to their environment Focus on behavioral observation and introspection
Structuralism – experiences are based on: 1) objective observations 2) subjective feelings Rely on INTROSPECTION
Functionalism Focuses on how the brain works to perceive its environment Introspection and observation Attempts to address the purposes of mental processes
Behaviorism The idea that an outside mental process cannot be studied Observing behavior is the only scientific way to study mental processes
Reinforcement Behavior can be reinforced through a system of rewards Operant Conditioning – a mind learns by “operating” on its environment
Self Awareness The mind is naturally self aware of its functions and obstacles to learning Inferiority Complex The belief that fear of failure motivates one to succeed
Psychoanalysis The brain is motivated by things in the subconscious All thoughts and actions are significant and reflect some level of reality or consciousness Psychoanalysis – emphasizes the importance of unconscious motives in determining human behavior Psychodynamic thinking – most brain activity is uncounscious
Gestalt School of Thought (whole figure) Things cannot be broken into structural elements to be understood People perceive sights and sounds as organized “wholes” or GROUPS Everything associated with an object is as important as that object
Biological Perspective Evolutionary Perspective Cognitive Perspective Humanistic Perspective Psychoanalytic Perspective Learning Perspective Social-learning theory ethnic group