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Summary AQA A Level Psychology Paper 3 - ISSUES AND DEBATES A* ESSAY PLANS

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INCLUDES: - A* Essay plans (Ao1 + Ao3) for all of the issues and debates specification points - Colour coding of researchers / key stats / marking vocabulary to aid recall / blurting / flashcards Specification-tailored essay plans for the ENTIRE issues and debates topic in AQA A Level psychology How? - Past paper analysis, directly including phrases from mark schemes

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1 - Gender bias
AO1 AO3

Universality & bias ISSUE: Gender differences are given as fixed + enduring
Universality -​ Maccoby & Jacklin (1974)
-​ Observed behaviours apply equally to all humans / -​ CONCLUDED: Girls have better verbal ability / boys have
regardless of differences. better spatial ability
-​ Research about human behaviour is objective / value-free / -​ DUE TO hardwired biological brain differences
consistent across time and culture -​ E: Joel et al (2015) used brain scanning (fMRI) + found no
Gender bias gender differences
-​ The differential treatment and/or representation of males -​ L: We should be wary of accepting research as biological facts
and females / based on stereotypes & pre-existing beliefs, -​ Differences may be better explained with social stereotypes
not differences. -​ Social learning theory may be a better approach

AnDROocentrism ISSUE: Evidence for alpha bias
-​ Male-centered -​ Ingalhalikar et al (2014)
-​ Consequences of androcentrism = alpha & beta bias -​ SUGGESTS: the popular social stereotype that females are
-​ Psych = traditionally been a male-dominated subject better at multitasking may have some biological truth.
-​ Female behaviour is often misunderstood, even pathologised -​ E: Females have a thicker corpus callosum connecting the L +
(sign of illness / abnormality) R hemispheres (very small difference in size)
-​ L: There may be biological differences BUT we should be wary
EXAMPLE: PMS - premenstrual syndrome of exaggerating their true effect on behaviour.
-​ Brescoll + Uhlmann (2008) oh man
-​ Feminists object to PMS because it medicalises female
emotion by explaining it in hormonal terms ISSUE: Gender bias promotes sexism in the research process
-​ BUT male anger is often seen as a rational response to -​ Murphy et al (2014)
external pressures -​ Women are underrepresented in university depts
-​ AND research is more likely to be conducted by males, which
Alpha bias may disadvantage females.
-​ Exaggerates differences -​ E: Male researchers may have false expectations of female
-​ Differences between the sexes are presented as fixed and behaviour
inevitable (regardless of the reality) -​ EG: being unable to complete certain tasks / lower ability level
-​ Often leads to females being devalued -​ Women may underperform (self-fulfilling prophecy)
-​ L: Institutional structures & methods of psychological research
EXAMPLE: The Psychodynamic theory (Oedipus + Electra) may produce findings that are gender-biased in a
-​ Freud (1905) male-dominated sphere.
-​ Children in the phallic stage desire their oposite-sex parent
-​ Resolved through identification with their same-sex parent ISSUE: Research challenging bias may NOT be published
-​ Oedipus complex + the Electra complex -​ Formanowicz et al (2018)
-​ Female identification is weaker = weaker Superego = weaker -​ Content analysis of 1,000 articles relating to gender bias
moral development -​ FOUND: Research into gender bias is funded less often &
published by less prestigious journals.
Beta bias -​ E: Held true when gender bias was compared to ethnic bias &
-​ Minimises differences when other factors were controlled
-​ Ignoring or underestimating differences between men + -​ (eg; methodology / author’s gender)
women occurs when ppts of one gender are excluded in the -​ L: Gender bias may NOT be taken as seriously as other forms
research process of bias
-​ Assumed that the research findings apply equally to both
sexes ISSUE: Value of confronting gender bias (reflexivity)
-​ Gender-biased research creates misleading assumptions
EXAMPLE: Fight or flight about female behaviour
-​ Early research into fight or flight was based on male animals -​ BUT…
-​ BECAUSE female hormones fluctuate -​ Modern researchers recognise the effect assumptions have on
-​ It was assumed to be a universal response to a threat their work
-​ Taking a reflexive approach = embracing differences as a
crucial aspect of the research process.
-​ Declaring personal experiences + preconceptions - impacting
how they act & interpret QUALITATIVE data
-​ L: Gender bias may add an extra dimension to research IF
psychologists are up front about it in their work.

Limitations of androcentrism
-​ Prejudice against other ethnic groups
-​ Discrimination against other ethnic groups
-​ Western norm, devaluing other cultures

, 2 - Cultural bias
AO1 AO3

American students are overrepresented in research Evidence of universality
REVIEWS BY… -​ Ekman (1989)
Henrich et al (2010) found… -​ FOUND: basic facial expressions associated with emotions
-​ 68% of research ppts = from the US -​ Eg: disgust / anger / fear / happiness
-​ 96% of research ppts = from industrialised nations -​ Are the same & recognised across a range of cultures
Arnett (2008) found… -​ E: Indicates that some core emotional responses are
-​ 80% of research ppts = undergrads studying psych biologically determined & universal rather than culturally
learned
WEIRD people set standard -​ Ext. v - emojis (even universal digital communication)
Henrich et al -​ L: This suggests a full understanding of human behaviour
-​ Describes the group of people most likely to be studied by requires both cultural relativism & universality.
psychologists
-​ Westernised / Educated people from / Industrialised / Rich / The emergence of cultural psychology
Democracies -​ Cohen (2017)
-​ Norms / standards are set by WEIRD people -​ Cultural psychology is the study of how people shape & how
-​ Behaviours outside this demographic may be perceived to be they are shaped by their cultural experience.
different from the outset (outliers) -​ Emerging field that takes an emic approach.
-​ E: Research conducted from INSIDE a culture, alongside
Culture bias & ethnocentrism indigenous researchers using culturally-based techniques
Cultural bias -​ Eg: (Grossmann et al 1981)
-​ Favouring one culture over others, often unconsciously + -​ L: Modern psychologists are mindful of the dangers of cultural
unintentionally bias, taking steps to avoid it (reflexive approach)
EthnocentriSm (s = superior)
-​ Actively judging other cultures according to the standards + ISSUE: Many classic studies are culturally-biased
values of your own culture / believing one’s own culture is -​ Both Asch + Milgram’s original studies were conducted with
superior. white m-class US ppts (WIERD criteria).
-​ Can be communicated by viewing any behaviours that don’t -​ Replications of these different studies in different counties
conform to a European / American standard produced different results.
-​ As deficient or underdeveloped -​ E: Asch-type experiments in collectivist cultures
-​ Found significantly higher conformity rates than the original
EXAMPLE: Attachment studies in the US
Ainsworth + Bell’s (1970) ‘Strange Situation’ -​ L: Findings may only represent WIERD / individualist cultures,
-​ Research on attachment type reflecting the norms of US limiting the generalisability of social influence research.
culture
-​ Ideal (secure) attachment = defined by a baby showing ISSUE: Ethnic stereotyping
moderate stress when left alone by the mother figure -​ Gould (1981)
Takahashi (1986) -​ EXPLAINED how the 1st intelligence tests (IQ) led to eugenic
-​ Found Japanese babies (rarely left alone) are more likely to social policies in America.
be classed as insecurely attached -​ During WW1, psychologists gave IQ tests to 1.75m army
-​ Showing distress on separation recruits (data used to sterilise the population in Nazi Germany)
-​ E: Many test items were ethnocentric
-​ Eg; naming US presidents / so recruits from other cultural
Cultural relativism vs universality backgrounds (Eastern European or African American heritage)
Cultural relativism scored lowest = deemed genetically inferior
-​ Behaviour can only be understood in the context in which -​ L: Cultural bias can be used to justify prejudice &
the culture or society’s norms / beliefs / values occur in discrimination towards ethnic & cultural groups.
-​ Universality: all behaviours apply equally, regardless of
differences
Ways to avoid cultural bias in research (ao2 q’s)
Etic vs emic approaches -​ Use researchers native to the culture being investigated
Berry (1969) argues… (indigenous researchers)
-​ Etic (them) approach: looks at behaviour OUTSIDE a given -​ Take a reflexive approach (constantly reflecting on own biases
culture / identifying when conducting research)
behaviours which are -​ Don’t attempt to extrapolate findings to cultures that aren’t
universal represented in the research sample
-​ Emic (me) approach:
functions from INSIDE a
culture / identifies
behaviours that are
specific to that culture

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