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AS/A Level Approaches - Notes and Summary for ALL approaches for AQA

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Comprehensive notes & a short summary of all the 6 approaches for AQA AS/A-Level psychology. All explanations, key terms, case studies/experiments and AO3 evaluations are included. Covers behaviourism, SLT, Cognitive, biological, psychodynamic, and humanistic approach Includes all the key terms, AO1, AO3, case studies and explanations Suitable for revision and exam prep

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Uploaded on
November 9, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
Type
Summary

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What are approaches?
Approaches in psychology explain behaviours differently. The spec includes
these 6 approaches:
-​ Behaviourism
-​ Social Learning Theory
-​ Cognitive
-​ Biological
-​ Psychodynamic
-​ Humanistic




Behaviourism
The behaviourist approach suggests that all children are born as tabulae
rasae (blank slates), and they learn through interactions with their
environments:



Assumptions of the behaviouristic approach:
-​ Nearly ALL behaviours are learnt
-​ Animals and humans learn in the same ways
-​ The mind is irrelevant to science BECAUSE it cannot be observed, and it
CANNOT provide measurable data
-​ Behaviours are learned through two ways: classical conditioning and
operant conditioning



Classical Conditioning (Pavlov, 1927):
-​ States that humans learn through associations
Example:
Before association:
Bell (NEUTRAL STIMULUS) —> NO RESPONSE
Food (UNCONDITIONED STIMULUS) —> Salivation (UNCONDITIONED
RESPONSE)
Bell (NEUTRAL STIMULUS) + Food (UNCONDITIONED STIMULUS) —> Salivation
(UNCONDITIONED RESPONSE)
After association:
Bell (CONDITIONED STIMULUS) —> Salivation (CONDITIONED RESPONSE)

The dog has now learned to salivate upon hearing a bell BECAUSE it has
received food in conjunction with hearing the bell.

, Operant Conditioning (Skinner, 1953):
-​ States that humans learn through reinforcement

Key terms:
Positive reinforcement - Carrying out a behaviour to receive a reward
-​ Example: Doing chores to receive pocket money.
Negative reinforcement - Carrying out a behaviour to remove an unpleasant
consequence
-​ Example: Doing your homework to avoid a detention
Punishment - Receiving an unpleasant consequence due to not carrying out
the desired behaviour
-​ Example: Going to jail because you killed someone
! It is common to confuse negative reinforcement and punishment! Just
remember:
Negative reinforcement: you have CARRIED out a desired behaviour to
REMOVE a consequence
Punishment: YOU ARE SUFFERING THE CONSEQUENCE because YOU
DIDN’T CARRY OUT THE DESIRED BEHAVIOUR



Skinner’s Box
-​ A rat was placed inside a skinner box
-​ The rat learned to press the lever in order to receive a reward of food
pellets (POSITIVE REINFORCEMENT)
-​ The rat also received electric shocks for not pressing the level
(PUNISHMENT) SO the rat learned to press the lever to avoid the electric
shocks (NEGATIVE REINFORCEMENT)



Evaluation
STRENGTHS:
1.​ SCIENTIFIC CREDIBILITY:
The experiments (Pavlov & Skinner) took place under controlled,
lab experiments
2.​ REAL LIFE APPLICATION:
This behaviourist has use in the real world, such as:
Treating phobias (systematic desensitisation)
LIMITATIONS:
1.​ ENVIRONMENTAL DETERMINISM:
This approach ignores free will
Ignores internal mental processes that are involved in learning
2.​ REDUCTIONIST:
Reduces behaviour to stimulus-response links & reinforcement,
completely ignores biological/cognitive factors
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