Detailed Revision Notes of the Approaches topic of AQA A-Level Psychology produced by me using both the textbook and class notes. Has both the AO1 and AO3 needed to gain top marks.
Includes: ORIGINS OF PSYCHOLOGY, BEHAVIOURISM, SOCIAL LEARNING THEORY, COGNITIVE APPROACH, BIOLOGICAL APPROACH, PSYCH...
AQA A level psychology summary notes- social influence
AQA Psychology a level summary notes- Research Methods
AQA a level psychology- psychopathology summary notes
All for this textbook (104)
Written for
A/AS Level
AQA
Psychology
Approaches
All documents for this subject (491)
Seller
Follow
laraxx
Reviews received
Content preview
Approaches
ORIGINS OF PSYCHOLOGY
1879: Wilhelm Wundt opened first ever psychological enquiry lab in Germany
Marks the beginning of scientific psychology
Wundt’s aim: to analyse the nature of human consciousness
Introspection: First systematic attempt to study the mind under controlled conditions
o Broke up conscious awareness into basic structures of thoughts, images & sensations
(structuralism)
AO3 PARAGRAPHS
P- A strength is that some of his methods were systematic & well controlled.
E- For example, his introspections were recorded in the controlled environment of the lab so
extraneous variables were not a factor.
E- All procedures were standardised so all pps received the same information and were tested in the
same conditions.
L- This suggests Wundt’s research contributed to later scientific approaches such as the behaviourist.
P- A limitation is that Wundt’s research would be considered unscientific today.
E- For example, Wundt relied on pps self-reporting their mental processes which is subjective.
E- Also some pps may have hidden thoughts so it is hard to establish meaningful ‘laws of behaviour’
which can be generalised and used to predict future behaviour.
L- Therefore, Wundt’s results can not necessarily be generalised and applied today.
LEARNING APPROACH: BEHAVIOURISM
Emerged early 1900s
Main people: John B Watson (and Ian Pavlov & BF Skinner)
Focuses on human behaviour that is observable, measurable and objective (not biological)
Not concerned with mental processes so rejected introspection
o Involved vague concepts which were hard to measure
Aim to study behaviour under controlled lab conditions
Studied behaviour in the form of stimulus-response form
Believe that basic processes that govern learning are the same in animals & humans
, o Inspired by Darwin
o Therefore, use animals as experimental subjects
We are born as a blank slate – a ‘tabula rasa’ – everything we become is shaped by the process
of learning from our environment.
Driving force in development of psychology as a scientific discipline
Extreme ‘nurture’ end of nature-nurture debate
Conditioning: learnt behaviour
Classical conditioning
Learnt through association
o Humans & animals born with reflexes (stimulus & response) which become associated
1st & 2nd stimulus are consistently associated together, both stimuli produce response
individually
We are conditioned from a young age to perform certain behaviours e.g. shaking hands
Pavlov’s Dogs
Dogs conditioned to salivate when hearing bell after it repeatedly heard/associated with food
Neutral stimulus (bell) associated with unconditioned stimulus (food) which stimulated
salivation response
Eventually the neutral stimulus (bell) produced a conditioned response (salivation)
Little albert experiment
Ethical issues: couldn’t give consent, albert could have long term trauma
Operant conditioning
Behaviour is learnt through consequences (positive/negative)
o Positive Reinforcement: receiving a reward when behaviour is performed
o Negative Reinforcement: avoiding something unpleasant is a ‘positive experience’
E.g. handing in homework avoids being told off
o Punishment: an unpleasant consequence of a behaviour
o Used in reward & sanction
o Real world: education (taught tasks and have positive reinforcement)
Skinner
Positive Reinforcement
o Rats move around the cage and when it accidently presses the lever a food pellet
(reinforcer) is dropped
o Rats learnt to press the lever to get food
Negative Reinforcement
o Rats move around the cage and when it accidently presses the lever an electric shock was
given
o Conditioned to avoid the behaviour (lever pressing) to avoid an unpleasant stimulus
(electric shock)
AO3 PARAGRAPHS
P- A strength is that the behaviourist approach is that it is based on well-controlled research
E- Behaviourists focus on measuring observable behaviour within lab settings. By breaking down
behaviour into basic stimulus-response units all other extraneous variables were removed so cause-
and-effect relationships can be established.
E- For example, Skinner clearly demonstrated how reinforcement influenced an animal’s behaviour.
C- However, it could be argued that they have over-simplified the learning process and other
approaches (e.g. cognitive) have shown how mental processes are involved.
L- Nevertheless, due to lack of extraneous variables, behaviourist experiments have scientific
credibility.
P- A strength is that the behaviourist approach has real life application
The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:
Guaranteed quality through customer reviews
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
Quick and easy check-out
You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Focus on what matters
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
Frequently asked questions
What do I get when I buy this document?
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Who am I buying these notes from?
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller laraxx. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
Will I be stuck with a subscription?
No, you only buy these notes for $5.33. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.