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AP Psychology Jeopardy

AP Psychology Jeopardy. History and Approaches. By Hitchhiker’s Guide to High School. Rules for Review Jeopardy. Teams should come up with a team name (School Appropriate) that they plan to keep for the entire game. Name should go on the top of your whiteboard

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AP Psychology Jeopardy

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  1. AP Psychology Jeopardy History and Approaches By Hitchhiker’s Guide to High School

  2. Rules for Review Jeopardy • Teams should come up with a team name (School Appropriate) that they plan to keep for the entire game. Name should go on the top of your whiteboard • Each team will have a chance to choose a category and the team choosing will get the first chance to answer the question. • Teams will have 90 seconds to answer the question. After 90 seconds the answer is void and will be counted as incorrect (loss of points) • If the team is correct they will be awarded points, if they are incorrect the other teams have the option to “steal” the question. They must raise their hands first and have the correct answer. If a team trying to steal gets the question wrong they will lose the number of points that the question is worth. • Any unsportsmanlike conduct will result in a warning, followed by a loss of points, followed by the permanent conclusion of the game with no points or prizes awarded. • There will be FINAL Jeopardy where you have the opportunity to bet against your score, so don’t get discouraged if your score is low.

  3. This school of thought believes that learning occurs as a result of experiences and observations. • Behavioral Approach ($100)

  4. These scientists believe that our unconscious desires influence our behavior. • Psychoanalytic or Psychodynamic approach ($200)

  5. This approach believes that physiological and chemical interactions influence behavior and mental processes. • Biological Approach ($300)

  6. Which school of thought is focused on the importance of encoding, storing and retrieving information? • Cognitive Approach ($400)

  7. This model integrates biology, psychology, and sociology to provide an all-encompassing approach for understanding thought and behavior. • Biopsychosocial Model ($500)

  8. Predictions of how two or more factors are likely to be related are called: • Hypothesis ($100)

  9. This sample of participants often does not receive treatment during an experiment. • Control Group ($200)

  10. In order to accurately estimate a population, subjects must have an equal chance of being selected for a sample. This method of choosing participants is called? • Randomization or Random Selection($300)

  11. Dr. Jones is running an experiment to test whether her new drug is effective in relieving anxiety. Her participants are not told whether they have been given the drug or a placebo. The experimental staff who interview the participants after receiving treatment also do not know whether and individual was part of the experimental or control group. This type of method is called: • Double-Blind Study

  12. This describes the specific procedure or requirements used to determine the presence of a variable. • Operational Definition($500)

  13. In-depth analysis of a small group or single person that usually includes interviews, test scores, and behavioral observations is called: • Case Study ($100)

  14. This type of study is performed out in the field where a phenomenon normally occurs. The researcher gathers observations about behavior without controlling any variables. • Naturalistic Observation($200)

  15. This method uses questionnaires or interviews to ask people questions about their behaviors and/or beliefs, and then generalize the results to a larger population. • Survey Method ($300)

  16. This method looks at cross sections of the population look at a cross studies them at one specific point in time. . • Cross Sectional/Cross Correlational Study($400)

  17. In this type of studyone group or subject is studied for an extended period of time to observe changes in the long term. • Longitudal Study ($500)

  18. This person is considered the “Father of Psychology” and opened the first psychological laboratory in 1879 • Wilhelm Wundt ($100)

  19. This early school of thought focuses on how the mind allows people to function in the real world-how people play, work and adapt to their surroundings • Functionalism ($200)

  20. This perspective of Psycholgy is best described by the quote “The whole is greater than the sum of it’s parts.” • Gestalt Psychology ($300)

  21. This historical school of psychology focuses on intropection, repressed memories and the unconscious mind. • Psychoanalysis($400)

  22. William James ($500) This psychologist believed that structuralism was insufficient, and wanted to know how a behavior or sensation helps an individual adapt to their environment (functionalism).

  23. This is the scientific study of behavior and mental processes. • Psychology ($100)

  24. This is the tendency of people or animals to behave differently from normal when they know they are being observed: • Observer Effect($200)

  25. Define: Correlation • A measure of the relationship between two variables

  26. This is the phenomenon in which the expectations of the participants in a study can influence their behavior • Placebo Effect ($400)

  27. What is Pseudopsychology and provide 2 examples • Systems of explaining human behavior that are not based on scientific evidence. ($500)

  28. Define what a confounding variable is and give 3 examples. • A confounding variable is a difference between the experimental group and the control group that is not measured by the independent or dependent variables. • Age • Gender • Education • Environmental Differences • Other medications • Socioeconomic Status

  29. Directions: • Divide your class into two teams. • Choose a score keeper. • Each team chooses a captain. • Captains perform rocks, paper, scissors to see which team goes first. • Captain is the first to answer a question. The captain choses the next person to answer the next question. I allow them to answer as a team but the chosen student gives the final answer. • First team picks any square, click on the square to get the question. • Click on the same square to see the answer. • Alternate turns even if team gets it correct. Optional: If answer is wrong, deduct the dollar amount from the team’s winnings. • Next person to choose is picked by the previous student. • When a square has been used, it will fade. • Click on the small square in the top right corner to get the final jeopardy question. • Team can bet as many points as they • have available on the final question. • 13. Team with the most points wins!

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