AP Psychology Summer Assignment



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AP Psychology Summer Assignment Mr. Dann Forest High School A-266 Greetings AP Psychology students! I hope that you are looking forward to working really hard and having some fun next school year. Through doing both, I guarantee that you will experience a lot of learning. Interestingly enough, I designed this course to make sure you do just that! My goals are not only to make sure that you do well on the AP exam, but also to make sure that you never see or experience your world the same way ever again. We will substantively alter your understanding of yourself and those around you. Like I said, we (you) will need to work very, very (very) hard to accomplish this. But I promise that in return, you will be served a lifetime of our learning in action. To begin our journey, you need to complete a three-part summer assignment. While all of these parts are due at the beginning of our first class, you must e-mail me evidence of your progress over the summer (see Due Dates ). Your grade for each of these assignments will appear in each of the first three marking periods as your first grade. Important!! Failure to turn in even one of these assignments will result in a zero for all of them, which will be shown as the first grade in each of the first three marking periods. Please also note that you will earn an automatic zero for any part that is incomplete. In other words, incomplete work is not deemed whole and will not be given a partial grade you will earn a zero for it (as is expected in university). (Below are links to the readings that you need to complete Part A of the Summer Assignment) (Hold down control and click on link) 1 and 5 Readings - Theory Underlying Concept Maps 3 Reading - Psychodynamic Theory 4 Reading - Conditioned Reflexes 6 Reading - Humanistic Psychology Part A - Summer Reading Info, URLs and Citations (This is where URLs to readings "2" and "7" are located)

Summer Assignment, Part A: What is Psychology? Paper Adapted from Mr. Galusha s AP Psychology summer assignment, Weymouth HS, Weymouth, MA For your first summer assignment, you have an opportunity to, start at the very beginning. In a minimum of 1,000 words (around 3-4 pages) you need to analyze and answer the question, What is Psychology? Now I know AP Psychology is probably one of those classes you might ve put on your schedule without quite knowing what you were taking. When you selected US History, you pretty much knew what you were going to learn. With Psychology, it might be a bit fuzzier, so let s add some clarity before we go any further. Psychology is the scientific study of human behavior and mental processes. Since this short definition packs quite a punch, let us break it down into its three assertions. First, this definition clearly declares that Psychology is a science. While you might be getting a social studies credit for this class, trust me, it s a science (you are indeed taking a science course in the social studies department). Psychology uses the scientific method to carefully craft creative experiments and meticulously compute complex data. Psychology commands that you have an intricate understanding of our brain, our nervous and endocrine systems, how they are interconnected and how this biology affects our behavior. Psychology might not boast the exactness of physics or chemistry, but really, when is the last time an electron created an emotional memory from an experiment, or a particle had a bizarre dream? Psychologists study things that are much, much more complex humans and we do our scientific best with the subject we are analyzing. Second, this definition alerts you to the fact that psychologists study human behavior. This is good since if you re going to use the scientific method in an attempt to understand people, you had better be able to actually observe what you re talking about. Behavior is certainly something you can observe. From a child s temper tantrum to an adult s body language during a first date, psychologists use human behavior as data points for their research and hopefully that research helps explain, or even predict, future behaviors. Third, but certainly not least, psychology is the study of mental processes. Have you ever texted while walking, and thought how did I get here? Maybe you had a really wild dream last night did you ever think about why? It s seventh period and you re thinking about your afternoon, but you re still nodding along with your teacher s lecture as if you were listening? Well, that s the type of behavior vs. mental process disparity you ll be analyzing. Human behavior is really only half the equation - mental processes make up the other half. This presents a problem, though. You can t see thoughts, and as scientists, if we can t observe it, we can t study it, right? Well... this would be the case if psychologists didn t have access to two important things: brain imaging tools and imagination. Tools like fmris and PET scans help psychologists see the inner workings of the human mind, while wonderfully and creatively designed experiments help us gain access to what would otherwise be a black box. Armed with these two, psychologists can mine the inner workings of mental processes. Now, you may be thinking that I ve just written your first summer assignment for you - copy paste and you re all set. Of course, you are wrong. While you ll find an overarching agreement among contemporary psychologists on these three points, you will see that there are many types of answers that different psychologists use to explain their underlying causes. These different answers are a result of differing approaches to Psychology. Think of approaches as different lenses you can wear to study psychology. For example, if you approach psychology from a biological perspective you might ask

questions about how a person s biology determines their behavior. If you approach psychology from a social perspective you might try to explain a person s behavior by looking at how others may have influenced it. These different lenses help to create the questions and thus conclusions their wearers ask and get. This would be like if you wore purple sunglasses, everything you d see would be a bit purple. In our class we ll focus on the following six approaches: 1. Biological 2. Psychodynamic 3. Behavioral 4. Cognitive 5. Humanistic 6. Socio-cultural Assignment 1 Guidelines a) To start you off on the road to psychological understanding, you are to read analytically the six articles provided (i.e. you will and should interact with and mark- up the articles as you read). They range from peer reviewed articles to magazine and journal articles and represent these seven approaches. Keep in mind that regardless of what approach you take to psychology, it is always a science. b) Think about how to answer the question, What is Psychology?. Then, in a minimum of 1,000 words, write a paper that responds to this question. c) You must meaningfully incorporate your understandings from all of the readings in your response. Allow the readings to inform your understanding of the question. Successful papers will synthesize these articles using them as evidence to support your definition of psychology (which is your thesis). These readings and the essay will not be easy, and they aren t meant to be. However, if you work through it, you will gain some wonderful psychological insights. It is expected at the AP level that when you encounter a word or term which you cannot define in the context of a reading (and you will), it is your responsibility to seek additional sources (online dictionaries are nice ) to help you. d) Format: MLA a. Times New Roman, 12 point font b. Double Spaced c. Default margins are acceptable (1.25 or 1 inch margins, depending on your version of Word). d. DO NOT DOUBLE-DOUBLE SPACE BETWEEN YOUR PARAGRAPHS (you will lose points for this formatting error!) e. MLA format, including both in-text citations and a Works Cited page. f. PLEASE NOTE THAT YOU MUST TURN IN A COPY OF THIS PAPER TO TURNITIN.COM DURING THE FIRST WEEK OF SCHOOL

Summer Assignment, Part B Key Psychologists Reference Guide Purpose The purpose of this assignment provides you with an overview of the fundamental contributions of key psychologists that you will be studying this year (and those you need to know for the AP exam in May). Part B Guidelines As part of the course, you will be compiling your work through the year into a portfolio that will be of great value to you when studying for the AP Exam. For this part of your summer assignment, you will be creating a detailed reference guide that highlights the key psychologists you will be analyzing this year (we will refer to them as varsity psychologists ). To do this, you are to create a graphically organized reference guide that includes all of the Varsity Psychologists (see list below). Your organizer needs to provide thorough (not fluffy ), succinct (please, don t go on and on about the individual make your passages meaty ), answers to the following essential questions: What was the lifespan of the individual? o This provides you with a sense era What was the researcher s area of study? o This should be a 1-5 word description, tops What were the basics of the researcher s study? o Here you need to go into a little more detail on the area of study. What were they trying to find out? What did they believe about their area of study? Here you also need to include the names of any famous study(ies) they are known for. Any names of studies and/or theories they are especially known for should be bold and/or underlined.

Sources should be referenced in MLA style. You must turn in a works cited page with your completed organizer. (Note: Citations will not be required for photographs for this assignment). Varsity Psychologist The Science of Psychology: History, Approaches, and Methodology Wilhelm Wundt William James Dorothea Dix G. Stanly Hall Mary Whiton Calkins Memory Elizabeth Loftus Hermann Ebbinghaus The Biological Bases of Behavior Paul Broca Michael Gazzaniga Roger Sperry Carl Wernicke Sensation, Perception, and States of Consciousness Gustav Fechner

David Hubel Torsten Wiesal Ernest Hilgard Learning Albert Bandura John Garcia Ivan Pavlov B.F. Skinner Edward Thorndike Edward Tolman John B. Watson Cognition Thinking, Problem Solving, Creativity and Language Wolfgang Kohler Noam Chomsky Intelligence, Testing, and Individual Differences Alfred Binet Francis Galton Howard Gardner Charles Spearman Robert Sternberg Lewis Terman David Wechsler

Motivation, Emotion, and Stress Alfred Kinsey Abraham Maslow Stanley Schachter Hans Selye Developmental Psychology Mary Ainsworth Albert Bandura Erik Erikson Carol Gilligan Harry Harlow Lawrence Kohlberg Konrad Lorenz Jean Piaget Lev Vygotsky Personality Alfred Adler Paul Costa Robert McCrae Sigmund Freud Carl Jung Carl Rogers Abnormal Psychology and the Treatment of Psychological Disorders Aaron Beck Albert Ellis Mary Cover Jones Social Psychology Solomon Asch Stanley Milgram Leaon Festinger Phillip Zimbardo

Due Dates Monday July 29th, 2013: Via one e-mail with the subject line reading: Last Name, Your First Name: AP Psychology Summer Project Evidence, e-mail me the following: Part A. Paper: An attachment showing a work in progress paper, at least 500 words written. Provide a word count at the top of your document. If it s fully completed great! E-mail me that (but you ll still have to turn it in on the first day of class). Part B. Key Psychologist Reference Guide: An attachment showing me evidence that you have completed information for at least 20 of the individuals. Be sure this evidence can be seen using a Microsoft based system (I use MS 2010 at my home). If you need to convert it, please do so. Technical problems are not acceptable, and not an excuse for late work, as in university. ***Failure to complete ALL of the above will result in a 10% deduction from your final summer assignment grades for ALL assignments.*** Monday August 19th, 2013: You must hand both at the beginning of class on our first day together. There will be areas at the front of the room for you to turn in your assignments. Please note that your paper needs to be turned in via turnitin.com. I will set you up with your accounts at school, and you will be given a few days to turn in your completed assignments during our first week together. Questions? Should you have any questions feel free to email me over the summer at Thomas.Dann@marion.k12.fl.us I will be checking my e-mail frequently over the summer.