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September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer in 3-5 sentences. **If you are not in your seat working on your Do Now when the bell rings,
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September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Jan 17, 2018

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Amice McGee

Question Research Hypothesis Procedure Data Observation Conclusion Gathering of information Was the hypothesis correct or incorrect?
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Page 1: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

September 27, 2012

Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer in 3-5 sentences. **If you are not in your seat working on your Do Now when the bell rings, you will be marked late**

Page 2: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Do Now

Do you consider psychology to be a real science?

Page 3: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Question

Research

Hypothesis

Procedure

Data

Observation

Conclusion

Gathering of information

Was the hypothesis correct or incorrect?

Page 4: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Placebo

• A “medicine” that has no active ingredients and works by the power of suggestion.

Page 5: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Double Blind Study

• A study during which neither participants nor experimenters know to which groups the subjects belong.

Page 6: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Subjects

• People or animals on which a study is conducted.

Page 7: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Variables are factors that change in an experiment.

Independent Variable-The factor in a study that is controlled or manipulated by the experimenter

Dependent Variable-The factor in a study that changes or varies because of changes in the independent variable

Plants’ height growthHours spent studying

Weight gain

# of home runs hit Different weather conditions

Types of soda drank

Students’ gradesAmount of water given

Page 8: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Research Methods

Page 9: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Types of Research

1. Descriptive Research– characterizes the who, what, when, where, and how

about a certain population or phenomenon

2. Correlational Research– measures the relationship between two variables

3. Experimental Research– examines the causal relationship between two or more

variables

Page 10: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Naturalistic Observation• Behavior is observed in the

environment in which it occurs naturally.

• Watching and recording the behavior of organisms in their natural environment– Unobtrusive measure, no

intervention by researcher

• Example: Jane Goodall’s studies of chimpanzees in the wild use of tools

• Example: Watching a student’s behavior in the classroom

Page 11: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Naturalistic ObservationPros:–Allows understanding of behavior in a natural

setting (avoids artificiality of laboratories)

Cons:– Like other descriptive research, observation describes behavior rather than explaining it.–Can be difficult to be unobtrusive in some cases– Ethical concerns

Page 12: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Case Study• Behavior of one person or a few people is

studied in depth.

• Examples:– Person with TBI– A puppy living with goats– A child growing up with a pack of

wolves

Page 13: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Case Study

Pros:–Allow for detailed understanding of an

individual’s psychology–Can suggest ideas for future research

Cons:–Any given individual may be atypical,

nonrepresentative of the general population

Page 14: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Surveys• A large number of participants are asked a standard

set of questions (i.e. beliefs, attitudes, preferences, behaviors)

• Intended to draw conclusions about the opinions or behaviors of a certain population by surveying a sample from that population

• Examples– Voting habits– When people do their shopping– Course evaluations

Page 15: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Surveys

Pros:– Inexpensive– Easy to do quickly– If the sample is truly random, surveys can provide

a representative depiction of the population as a whole.

• Cons:– Sources of bias• How questions are phrased• Only those who have a strong opinion may it mail back

Page 16: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Correlational Research

• Uses statistical methods to examine the relationships between two or more variables.

• Examples:– Media violence and violent behavior– Hours studied and test scores

• Non examples:– Shoe size and length of fingernails – Water drank and number of countries visited

Page 17: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Positive correlation: An increase in one variable predicts an increase in the other (i.e. height and weight)

Negative correlation: An increase in one variable predicts a decrease in the other (i.e. self-esteem and depression)

Correlation of 0: No relationship between the variables

Correlational Research

Page 18: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Correlational Research

Pros:–Cheap and easy to do

Cons:–Does not explain why something has a

positive/negative relationship–One does not always cause the other

?

Page 19: September 27, 2012 Do Now: Answer the following question on a separate sheet of paper: Do you consider psychology to be a real science? Explain your answer.

Summary

• Is psychology a real science? • What are some of the research methods that

psychologists use in their work?• How does a psychologist use the Scientific

Method to understand human behavior?• What is an example of something a research

psychologist might study and how might an applied psychologist use those findings?