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A-Level Psychology – Approaches Notes (Complete Pack)

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A-Level Psychology – Approaches Notes (Complete Pack) Get exam-ready with this comprehensive study pack on the Approaches in Psychology module. Perfect for AQA A-Level Psychology, this resource covers all the key perspectives you need to know, with clear explanations, evaluation points, and key terms. Topics included: Origins of Psychology – Wundt, introspection, the emergence of psychology as a science. Behaviourist Approach – classical conditioning (Pavlov), operant conditioning (Skinner), key studies, strengths and weaknesses. Social Learning Theory (SLT) – Bandura’s Bobo Doll study, modelling, imitation, identification, vicarious reinforcement. Biological Approach – genetics, evolution, the nervous system, brain structure, neurotransmitters. Psychodynamic Approach – Freud’s theory of personality (id, ego, superego), psychosexual stages, defence mechanisms. Cognitive Approach – internal mental processes, schema theory, computer analogy, role of cognitive neuroscience. Humanistic Approach – Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, self-actualisation, Rogers’ client-centred therapy, congruence. Key Terms – fully defined and explained to help secure AO1 mark

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APPROACH KEY POINTS
 Origins Of Psychology  Wundt: 'father of psychology', set
up first psychology lab in Leipzig Germany,
advocated the use of introspection:
systematic analysis of ones own conscious
experience
 emergence of psychology as a
science: Watson argued that
introspection was unscientific and a
truly scientific psychology should
restrict itself to studying
observable, Water + Skinner
brought the language , methods
and rigour of the natural sciences
into psychology

 Learning approaches: Behaviourism  basic assumptions: behaviour is
learnt, focuses on observable
+measurable behaviour,
nomothetic
 classical conditioning: learning
through association, extinction- CS
now longer produces CR,
spontaneous recovery- CS + UCS
paired again response more quickly
 Pavlov’s research: dog + food + bell
 operant conditioning: learning
through consequences
 types of reinforcement: positive-
reward for certain behaviour
unpleasant
 Skinners research: rats responded
to levers and electric shocks
 AO3 *
 scientific credibility uses language +
methods of natural sciences
 real life application to token
economy systems which is used in
education and hospitals
 deterministic as it ignores influence
of free will on behaviour
 Learning approaches: social  basic assumption: learning takes
learning theory place within a social context
 imitation: copying behaviour of a
model
 identification: attachment to a
model with characteristics they
observer desires
 modelling: observing + imitating
the behaviour of a model

,  vicarious reinforcement: learning
indirectly
 what distinguishes it from
behaviourism is that observation +
performance do not need to occur
together the observer can
internalise the behaviour +
reproduce later
 the role of mediational process:
they come between stimulus and
response , attention, retention,
assessment of our ability and
motivation
 Banduras research: children ages
2.5 to 6 yrs, 3 groups:
reinforcement- rewarded with
sweets, punishment and control,
boys more aggressive and
reinforcement group had higher
aggression
 AO3 *
 less determinist than the
behaviourist approach: Bandura
emphasised reciprocal determinism
 over-reliance on evidence from lab
studies with contrived nature so we
cannot generalise
 underestimates the influence of
biological factors e.g. in Banduras
experiment testosterone may
have been a confounding variable
which systematically affected the
results
 Cognitive approach  basic assumptions: behaviour is
influenced by unconscious +
conscious thoughts, mind and body
is separate, use controlled research
 the study of internal mental
processes: use inference as direct
observation sis not possible
 the role of schema: they are mental
processes about our knowledge
and understanding, enable us to
process lots of info quickly but they
may lead to distortion + perceptual
errors
 the use of theoretical and
computer models: information
processing approach- storage input
and retrieval, computer analogy-
similar to computer in terms of

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