Sunday 29 August 2010

- Quotation:  "It takes a village to raise a child"
           Explain
           What do you think this quotation means?  (min. half page)
- See "What is Social Psychology" interview file.
            Day time talk show, interviewer and interviewee
            Audience must underline the important information

- Article "Diet of Fish can Prevent Teen Violence"
            http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2003/sep/14/science.health
        1. Do the results of the research support the claim?  Explain.


        a) Teach annotation.
        b) Answer the question.



1.  Is the headline descriptive, correlational, or causal? Explain.

2. Was an appropriate type of structured observation used to test the hypothesis that diet of fish can prevent teen violence? Explain.

3. Did the results of the research support the claim? Explain.



- Query:  Isn't Social Psychology just common sense?



Common Sense Quiz
True or False?
1. By conducting a well-designed correlational study, psychologists can demonstrate cause and effect relationships between independent and dependent variables.
2. Promising, and delivering, rewards to people for doing an enjoyable activity should, in the long run, make them enjoy the activity even more.
3. Focusing on a person’s voice is a better way to detect whether someone is telling a lie than focusing on the person’s face.
4. People tend to underestimate the extent to which other people share most of their opinions, attitudes, and behavior.
5. We tend to see the people in our own groups as more diverse and different from each other than we see people in other groups.
6. Seeing a picture of a person from a stereotyped group for only a fraction of a second can trigger thoughts of the stereotype.
7. If people tell a lie for a reward, they are more likely to come to believe the lie if they are given a small reward rather than a large reward for telling the lie.
8. People in a sad mood are less likely to help others than are people in a neutral mood.
9. If ten people are all telling you the same thing you are more likely to conform publicly to their opinion than if just five people are all telling you the same thing.
10. People in West Africa and China are more likely to conform to a group norm than are people in the United States or Canada.
11. Once people have rejected a large request, they become more likely to agree to a smaller request.
12. Once people have agreed to a small request, they become more likely to agree to a larger request.
13. Even if an authority figure instructed people to torture another person, few people would comply.
14. When like-minded people discuss an issue, their opinions tend to converge toward the middle.
15. Simply having other people around tends to make individuals perform better on easy tasks.
16. The greater the cohesiveness or solidarity of a group, the better its decisions will be.
17. Physically attractive individuals are usually seen as less intelligent than physically unattractive individuals.
18. Women tend to value and seek economic status in a mate more than men do.
19. The more often that people are exposed to a neutral stimulus, the more positively they evaluate that stimulus.
20. Women are more likely to reveal intimate facts and feelings to someone else than are men.
21. Our ability to know the causes of our own emotions is so limited that when we are aroused because of physical exercise, we may misinterpret that arousal as a sign that we are romantically attracted to someone nearby.
22. "Birds of a feather flock together" holds true in interpersonal attraction (i.e., people are generally attracted to those similar to themselves).
23. People are less likely to be aggressive if they recently released their tensions by aggressing than if they did not aggress.
24. People are more likely to be aggressive when it’s hot outside than when it’s cool.
25. Exposure to aggressive models in the media increases aggressive behavior among viewers of the aggression.
26. Male-to-female relationship violence is much more common than female-to-male relationship violence.
27. Believing that bad things happen to other people more than they happen to you is actually associated with better health and well-being.
28. People with few friends tend to live shorter, less healthy lives than people with lots of friends.
29. Very wealthy people (e.g., lottery winners) are happier than most other people.
30. Women "fall in love" more quickly than do men.
31. Women "fall out of love" more quickly than do men.
32. "Putting on a happy face" (i.e., smiling when you are really not happy) will not make you feel more positive.
33. Parental disapproval for a relationship (e.g., Romeo and Juliet) increases the chance that the partners will stay together.



Monday 23 August 2010

Week 2

Link Values to history and events described in life chart and interview.

- What is important to you?
         Preservation of the natural world.
         Freedom of the individual
         Winter and leisure
         Friends
         Mutual Respect

Give an example for each.

- What are the beliefs and values of you and your family?
-

Day 1 & 2

Life Maps.  I wish I still had one of mine to use as an example.

Chart the main events of your life, use appropriate symbols to signify major events.

Other ideas include the components of my OEE application.  ie - an artifact that represents yourself with accompanying explanation (typed and edited).

An interview (self-created or done in pairs as interviewee and interviewer)

Note:  Learning goal here is - "All peoples, places and things have sources of origin, or roots." Further, history, culture and people are in continual flux.  Life, history and culture are fluid.

(Note: This year as I go along, it is important to scan examplars into my blog to go with instructions.  This will save me a ridiculous amount of time in the future.  Do I need to make a life map as a way of introducing myself?)

Probably a good idea.  It can be used in all of my classes.  Digital - or otherwise?

Resource Links

http://www.sasked.gov.sk.ca/docs/midlsoc/gr9/9overview.html