PSY 310 Social Psychology Fall I 2007 INSTRUCTOR: STAFF [TBA] PHONE: EMAIL: FAX: REQUIRED TEXTS: Title Social Psychology: Unraveling the Mystery Author(s) Kenrick‚ D. T.‚ Neuberg‚ S. L.‚ & Cialdini‚ R. B. Copyright (2007) Publisher Allyn and Bacon. ISBN 0-205-49395-5 Edition 4th Edition This Course Requires the Purchase of a Course Packet: YES NO Argosy University COURSE SYLLABUS PSY310 Social Psychology Faculty Information Faculty Name:
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Describe the personal background and the historical context of Albert Speer. “The only motive that can keep politics pure is the motive of doing good for one’s country and its people”- Henry Ford Albert Speer was born in 1905 into an upper-middle class family. His family’s wealth provided the opportunity to extend his education at a university level despite the depths of the depression in 1930. After graduating with a degree in architecture‚ Speer was introduced to the policies of the Nazi Party;
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INTRODUCTION : • Who invented the computer? • What is computer? • How did the computer evolve? • Where did it start? Charles Babbage‚ a British professor mathematics is the man who invented the first computer in 1837. It was basically an mechanical type of calculator that also had a memory. The computer was powered by steam engine and used punched cards for programming. A computer is a general purpose device that can be programmed to carry out a set of arithmetic or logical
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Burrhus Frederic Skinner was an influential American psychologist‚ who added to the vocabulary of behaviorism the concepts of negative and positive reinforcer and of punishment. Skinner also invented the operant conditioning chamber. According to B. F. Skinner‚ positive reinforcement is the key to producing desired behaviors. Skinner believed that people "...work harder and learn more quickly when rewarded for doing something right than when punished for doing something wrong" (Charles‚ 1999)
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“Floating” By Karen Brennan “But no one owns anyone or owes anyone anything” (Brennan 304). In the story “Floating‚” Karen Brennan uses the themes of regret‚ rejection‚ guilt and death‚ to demonstrate how trauma in a relationship effects both sides differently. She illustrates the difference between herself and her husband‚ telling the story of what she feels and what her husband feels. In the beginning a sense of rejection is presented‚ this is shown when Karen quotes‚ “I
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THE CURRICULUM (continuation…) Prepared by: Jelina Mira C. Fernando‚ RN CURRICULUM AND INSTRUCTION • is a field within education which seeks to research‚ develop‚ and implement curriculum changes that increase student achievement within and outside of schools • focuses on how students learn and the best ways to educate • is also interested in new trends in teaching and learning process. It tries to find answers to questions such as "why to teach"‚ "what to teach"‚ "how
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Theoretical Framework in Nursing ELEMENTS‚ APPROACHES AND STRATEGIES OF THEORY DEVELOPMENT Basic Elements In Theory Building Relationship among THEORY‚ RESEARCH and PRACTICE PRACTICE RESEARCH THEORY * Relationship between THEORY and RESEARCH Research validates and modifies theory. * Relationship between THEORY and PRACTICE Theory guides practice. * Relationship between RESEARCH and PRACTICE Research is the key to the development of a discipline. Approaches
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Theoretical Framework Two approaches to ethical decision making have dominated ethics for a long period of time. Utilitarianism‚ developed by Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill‚ defines the moral goodness of actions by their consequences. This theory distinguishes good from bad‚ with particular emphasis on the happiness generated by the consequences. Those acts are right that produce greatest happiness for the greatest number. Utilitarianism‚ at times‚ requires that some good be sacrificed
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Cognitive Behavior Therapy My personal theoretical orientation to counseling is Cognitive-Behavioral therapy. Cognitive-Behavioral therapy helps the client to uncover and alter distortions of thought or perceptions which may be causing or prolonging psychological distress. The theoretical foundations of CBT are essentially those of the behavioral and cognitive approaches. CBT leads to a clear‚ persuasive‚ and evidence-based description of how normal and abnormal behavior develops and changes (Kramer
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anthropologists have started to write ethnographies about western‚ contemporary culture. For example‚ many anthropologists have written ethnographies on the diffusion of baseball to the far east. Karen Ho’s‚ Liquidated: An Ethnography of Wall St.‚ continues this trend of focusing on culture that is western. Karen Ho‚ while taking a leave of absence from Princeton‚ took a job on Wall St. only for the purpose of studying its culture.
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