Multicultural Psychology - correct answers The systematic study of behavior, cognition, and affect in
many cultures.
Culture - correct answers The values, beliefs, and practices of a group of people, shared through
symbols, and passed down from generation to generation.
Diversity - correct answers Acknowledgement of individual human differences that go beyond race,
ethnicity, and nationality, such as age, gender, sexual orientation, religion, socioeconomic status, and
physical ability.
Worldview - correct answers A psychological perception of the environment that determines how we
think, behave, and feel.
Biological Concept of Race - correct answers The perspective that a race is a group of people who share
a specific combination of physical, genetically inherited characteristics that distinguish them from other
groups.
Sociocultural Concept of Race - correct answers The perspective that characteristics, culture, values, and
behaviors that have been associated with groups of people who share different physical characteristics
serve the social purpose of providing a way for outsiders to view another group and for members of a
group to perceive themselves.
Ethnicity - correct answers a combination of race and culture
Intersectionality - correct answers The meaningful ways in which various social statuses interact (e.g.,
race, gender, social class) and result in differing experiences with oppression and privilege.
Multiculturalism as the Fourth Force - correct answers The idea that multicultural psychology is so
important that it will fundamentally change the direction of the field of psychology, as psychoanalysis,
behaviorism, and humanism did.
,Paradigm Shift - correct answers A major change in the way people think about a field.
Biopsychosocial Model - correct answers A model of human behavior that takes into consideration
biological, cognitive-affective, social-interpersonal, social institutional, and cultural factors.
Negative Cognitive Triad - correct answers Beck's label for the negative view depressed individuals tend
to have of themselves, the world, and the future.
Critical Consciousness - correct answers Such people stop looking at problem as mostly individual
accidents but see them more as structural problems. Critical consciousness involves making connections
with the socio-economic contradictions in society. It means looking at reality and recognizing such
contradictions as a fact.
Justice - correct answers Fixing the system to offer equal access to both tools and opportunities
Structuralism - correct answers The first approach to psychology that attempted to examine the
contents of people's minds.
Structural introspection - correct answers The method that structuralists used to examine the contents
of people's minds.
Ethnical Psychology - correct answers The study of the minds of "other races and peoples."
Eugenics - correct answers A movement that maintains that only "good genes" should be passed from
generation to generation and that "undesirable" groups should be dissuaded from reproducing.
Etic Perspective - correct answers An attempt to build theories of human behavior by examining
commonalities across many cultures.
Emic Perspective - correct answers An attempt to derive meaningful concepts within one culture.
, Imposed Etics - correct answers The imposition of one culture's worldview on another culture, assuming
that one's own worldviews are universal.
Delay of Gratification - correct answers The ability to wait for a more desirable reward instead of taking
a less desirable reward immediately.
Individualism - correct answers A social pattern in which individuals tend to be motivated by their own
preferences, needs, and rights when they come into conflict with the preferences, needs, and rights of a
group or collective in which the individual is a member.
Collectivism - correct answers A social pattern in which individuals tend to be motivated by the group's
or collective's preferences, needs, and right when they come into conflict with the preferences, needs,
and rights of the individual.
The General Research Model - correct answers Control Group <-- Pool of Participants --> Experimental
Group. Each individual has an equal chance to be in the control or the experimental group. The control
group either does not receive any treatment or receives a typical treatment. The experimental group is
given a regimen designed to make some significant difference. This difference is determined by
comparing the results from the experimental group with the results from the control group.
The European American Standard: - correct answers The dominant research paradigm in American
psychology is to see European American as the standard against which all others are measured. Thus, if
people of color are measured as different form the European American standard, that difference is seen
as deviant or deficient. The diverse groups that come closer to the European American standard are
considered higher in the hierarchy of groups and more acceptable to the majority, whereas the groups
that are farther from the norm are deemed less acceptable. In contrast, diverse implies that there are
multiple perspectives or norms, with none being necessarily better or more desirable.
Internal Validity - correct answers Refers to causal inference. Internal validity suggests that our changes
make a difference. The extent to which you are sure that one variable, is responsible for the changes in
the dependent variable. How sure are you that there are no other explanations, or confounds, in your
study? Importance of random assignment
Equity - correct answers Custom tools that identify and address inequality