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SMESx Psychology 101 St. Margaret’s Episcopal School Course Syllabus Psychology 101 will provide you with foundational knowledge and thinking skills to understand the science of human behavior and thinking. 1. About Psych 101: Psychology is the academic and applied study of the human mind and behavior. Perhaps there are no more salient topics in the information age and the global economy than a comprehensive understanding of how learning takes place and what predicts and determines human behavior. The AP course is a primer, meant to provide substantive content through which to understand the human condition and to inspire students to continue their learning and growth. 2. Video Lectures: Each week will open with a Psych Report video clip to frame the lesson for the week and to dispel some common myths. There will also be 1 to 3 tablet capture videos to dive into the content of the week. Additionally, there are a few TED talks for students to watch. The TED talks are not mandatory content and students will not be held responsible for them on weekly quizzes and the final exam. 3. Prerequisites: An open mind and willingness to share your thoughts 4. Workload: It is expected that you will spend between 2 and 4 hours per week on homework, readings and other activities. 5. Textbooks and Resources: The required textbook is embedded in the course. The course instructors have curated the material that is most relevant to this class. If you are interested in reading the book in its entirety, it is available at: http://www.saylor.org/site/textbooks/Introduction%20to%20Psychology.pdf 6. Grading Policy: There will be 12 graded assignments in this course. Those who want to obtain a Certificate, must complete the weekly quizzes which contain between 5 and 7 multiple choices questions, a submission of responses to the two final Free Response Questions (FRQs) and a final exam which consists of 50 multiple choice questions. a. Weekly Quizzes (40%) b. Submission of FRQ responses (10%) c. Final Exam (50%)

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  • SMESx Psychology 101

    St. Margarets Episcopal School Course Syllabus

    Psychology 101 will provide you with foundational knowledge and thinking skills to understand the science of human behavior and thinking.

    1. About Psych 101:

    Psychology is the academic and applied study of the human mind and behavior. Perhaps there are no more

    salient topics in the information age and the global economy than a comprehensive understanding of how

    learning takes place and what predicts and determines human behavior. The AP course is a primer, meant

    to provide substantive content through which to understand the human condition and to inspire students to

    continue their learning and growth.

    2. Video Lectures: Each week will open with a Psych Report video clip to frame the lesson for the week and to dispel some common myths. There will also be 1 to 3 tablet capture videos to dive into the content of the week. Additionally, there are a few TED talks for students to watch. The TED talks are not mandatory content and students will not be held responsible for them on weekly quizzes and the final exam.

    3. Prerequisites: An open mind and willingness to share your thoughts

    4. Workload: It is expected that you will spend between 2 and 4 hours per week on homework, readings and other activities.

    5. Textbooks and Resources: The required textbook is embedded in the course. The course instructors have curated the material that is most relevant to this class. If you are interested in reading the book in its entirety, it is available at: http://www.saylor.org/site/textbooks/Introduction%20to%20Psychology.pdf

    6. Grading Policy: There will be 12 graded assignments in this course. Those who want to obtain a Certificate, must complete the weekly quizzes which contain between 5 and 7 multiple choices questions, a submission of responses to the two final Free Response Questions (FRQs) and a final exam which consists of 50 multiple choice questions.

    a. Weekly Quizzes (40%) b. Submission of FRQ responses (10%) c. Final Exam (50%)

  • 7. Schedule:

    Week

    Release Date

    Topics

    Readings

    Assignments

    1

    February 24

    History and approaches

    Textbook pages MC Questions Discussion Board

    2

    March 3

    Research Methods and Statistics

    Textbook pages

    MC Questions Discussion Board

    3

    March 10

    Biology Textbook pages

    MC Questions Discussion Board

    4

    March 17

    Sensation, perception and consciousness

    Textbook pages

    MC Questions Discussion Board

    5

    March 24

    Learning and Cognition

    Textbook pages Learning Handout

    MC Questions Discussion Board

    6

    March 31

    Motivation and Emotion

    Textbook pages

    MC Questions Discussion Board

    7

    April 7

    Developmental Psychology

    Textbook pages

    MC Questions Discussion Board

    8

    April 14

    Intelligence and Personality

    Textbook pages

    MC Questions Discussion Board

    9

    April 21

    Abnormal Behavior

    Textbook pages

    MC Questions Discussion Board

    10

    April 28

    Social Psychology

    Textbook pages

    MC Questions FINAL EXAM FRQ SUBMISSION

  • Module1(Week1and2) History, Approaches and Research Methods

    Key Terms: structuralism, functionalism, behaviorism, humanistic psychology, applied research, basic research, theory, hypothesis, case study, survey, population, random sample, correlation, scatterplot, experiment,, mode, mean, standard deviation,

    Big Picture Objectives and Questions: -What is psychology? -History of psychology -What do psychologists study and how? -How do psychologists share research results?

    Module 2 (Week 3 and 4)

    Biology, Sensation, Perception and Consciousness

    Neurons, dendrites, axons, myelin sheath, action potential, threshold, synapse, nervous system, endorphins, endocrine system, hormones, brainstem, MRI, brain structure, genetics, environment, DNA, natural selection, sensation, perception, attention, gestalt, perceptual set, consciousness, sleep, insomnia, apnea, hypnosis, dreams, drugs, depressants

    -What are neurons and how do they transfer information? -How do neurotransmitters influence behavior? -What are the functions of brain structures? -To what extent can a damaged brain reorganize itself? -What are genes and what do they do? -What are dependence and addiction? -How do perception and observation work together?

    Module 3 (Week 5 and 6)

    Learning, Cognition, motivation and emotion

    Learning, habituation, classical conditioning, operant conditioning, law of effect, extrinsic and intrinsic motivation, working memory, encoding, chunking, recall, recognition, heuristic, cognition, insight, creativity, hierarchy of needs, emotion, well-being, stress, language, sexual orientation

    -How does learning take place? -What gets remembered and how do we forget? -How do we learn language? -What are the components of an emotion? -What is motivation?

    Module 4 (Week 7 and 8)

    Developmental Psychology, Personality, Individual Differences

    Piagets stages of development, maturation, schema, Kohlbergs stages of moral reasoning, Eriksons psychosocial stages, adolescence, attachment, trust, temperament, ego, intelligence, multiple intelligences, emotional intelligence, IQ, aptitude tests, achievement tests, normal curve, reliability, validity, standardization

    - How does a childs mind develop? -What are the effects of temperament and parenting on attachment? -What was Freuds view development? -How does morality change as we get older? -What is the nature of intelligence? -What is the difference between aptitude and intelligence tests? -What do psychometrics measure?

    Module 5 (Week 9 and 10)

    Abnormal Behavior, Treatment of Abnormal Behavior, Social Psychology

    Psychological disorder, ADHD, anxiety, panic, phobia, OCD, PTSD, DID, Depression, Bipolar, schizophrenia, psychotherapy, resistance, transference, active listening, behavior therapy, cognitive therapy, social psychology, attribution theory, attitude, conformity, groupthink, culture, prejudice, stereotype, discrimination, social loafing, the bystander effect, altruism,

    -How do you draw the line between normality and disorder? -How do clinicians classify disorders? -What are the different types of therapy and do they work? -How do we explain others behavior and our own? -Does what we think affect what we do? -Do we attribute others behavior to internal or external causes? -What is prejudice?