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Title: Connecting%20Themes


1
Connecting Themes
  • The GADOE organizes each subject into a series of
    standards that are divided into units
  • The 1st unit is called Concepts Found in
    Psychology and includes 5 Connecting Themes that
    are found throughout the study of Psychology
  • Your job is to examine and understand each
    connecting theme. My job is to make it as
    interesting as I can.

2
  • The idea behind the 1st unit is for you to see
    underlying themes that recur in each of the
    subsequent units of study (Thats me trying to
    sound smart.).
  • The connecting themes serve as a foundation for
    you to build your house of Psychological
    knowledge (lame alert).

3
Connecting Themes
  • Beliefs and Ideals
  • Culture
  • Human Environment Interaction
  • Individuals, Groups, Institutions
  • Technological Innovations
  • Sounds exciting, right?

4
  • As I elaborate on each connecting theme, I want
    you to BRIEFLY respond to the prompts that
    follow.
  • You will have a chance to elaborate later.

5
In Addition
  • After responding to the prompts on each of the
    following slides, I want you to create a unique
    question for each connecting theme.
  • Questions should focus on how each connecting
    theme relates to you personally.
  • Or how each has affected your life
  • Questions should be designed to elicit
    conversation.

6
  • I. Beliefs and Ideals The student will
    understand that the beliefs and ideals of a
    society influence the social, political, and
    economic decisions of that society.
  • Identify the most fundamental ideals and beliefs
    of American society.
  • Identify your fundamental ideals and beliefs.
    Specifically, how do each of these beliefs and
    ideals affect your decisions?
  • Why did you decide to study psychology?
  • How do the beliefs and ideals of our society
    directly affect the way we view psychology?
  • ___________________________________

7
  • II. Individuals, Groups, Institutions The
    student will understand that the actions of
    individuals, groups, and/or institutions affect
    society through intended and unintended
    consequences.
  • When and how have your actions been affected by
    an individual, group, or institution? (i.e.
    individual you, group family, institution
    school)
  • Which actions have you taken that ended up much
    different than you intended as a result of
    interaction with others?
  • ___________________________________

8
  • III. Innovation The student will understand that
    technological innovations have consequences, both
    intended and unintended, for a society.
  • How has technology influenced your life?
  • What are some examples of how technology in your
    life ended up producing a result you had not
    expected?
  • ___________________________________

9
  • IV. Human Environmental Interaction The student
    will understand that humans, their society, and
    the environment affect each other.
  • How has the environment (your surroundings,
    nurture, etc.) affected your thoughts and
    behaviors?
  • How do humans, their society, and the environment
    affect each other?
  • ___________________________________

10
  • V. Culture The student will understand that the
    culture of a society is the product of the
    religion, beliefs, customs, traditions, and
    government of that society.
  • How would you define your culture?
  • What are some of your cultures traditions and
    customs?
  • ___________________________________

11
Socratic Seminar
12
Prologue The Story of Psychology
13
Prologue The Story of Psychology
  • Psychologys Roots
  • Prescientific Psychology
  • Psychological Science is Born
  • Psychological Science Develops

14
Prologue The Story of Psychology
  • Contemporary Psychology
  • Psychologys Big Debate
  • Psychologys Three Main Levels of Analysis
  • Psychologys Subfields

15
Psychology
  • more than a therapist and a couch

16
How is Psychology defined?
  • Psyche Logos

17
Today, Psychology is defined
  • The Scientific study of behavior and mental
    processes.

18
How old is Psychology?
19
  • Prescientific
  • Thinking about thinking / using deductive
    reasoning to understand mental processing
  • Logic and reasoning
  • Nature of the soul
  • Empiricism/inductive reasoning (based on
    observation)
  • Dark ages-Renaissance
  • I think therefore I am
  • Blank slate
  • Modern/Scientific
  • 1879
  • Psychoanalysis ?
  • Behaviorism
  • Technology and mental processing

20
Psychsim Activity
  • Psychologys Timeline

21
Psychologist Contribution Mnemonic Aprox. Date Country
Wundt
Skinner Skynard fans behave badly.
Freud
Watson
James
Darwin
Rogers
22
Psychologist Contribution Mnemonic Aprox.Date Country
Calkins
Dix
Hall
Pavlov
Piaget
Washburn

23
Checking for Understanding
  • Who is credited with some of the earliest
    Psychological insight?
  • Put these figures in sequential order.
  • Which 2 Psychological questions did they debate?

24
Early History
  • The Greeks (Socrates, Plato, Aristotle) are
    credited with some of the earliest insights into
    Psychology
  • They debated the nature of the soul
  • They debated whether knowledge was innate or
    learned

25
Prescientific Psychology
  • Socrates (469-399 B.C.) and Plato (428-348 B.C.)

http//www.law.umkc.edu
http//www.law.umkc.edu
Socrates
Plato
Socrates and his student Plato believed the mind
was separate from the body, the mind continued to
exist after death, and ideas were innate.
26
  • The unexamined life is not worth living.
  • -Socrates

27
Aristotle Embraces Empiricism
  • Empiricism
  • The belief that knowledge comes from experience
    via the senses
  • Science should rely on observation and
    experimentation

28
Prescientific Psychology
  • Aristotle (384-322 B.C.)

http//faculty.washington.edu
Aristotle suggested that the soul is not
separable from the body and that knowledge
(ideas) grow from experience.
29
  • The roots of education are bitter, but the
    fruit is sweet.
  • -Aristotle

30
Differing Perspectives
  • Socrates and Plato relied on deductive reasoning
    (based on logic) to reach their conclusions.
  • Aristotle arrived at different conclusions,
    partly due to the fact the he relied on inductive
    reasoning (using observations or examples to
    arrive at generalizations).
  • A precursor to modern Science

31
Platos Cave Allegory
  • Platos theory seeks to explain human behavior
    and mental processes, but he does so in a
    decidedly unscientific way.

32
Faulty Logic
  • Even so, Aristotle missed the mark on many of his
    conclusions
  • mice die if the drink in the summer-time
  • Eels are generated spontaneously
  • Humans only have eight ribs
  • Men have more teeth than women
  • Mind must be in the heart
  • Can survive blow to head
  • Heart wounds most often fatal
  • Brains function to cool the blood when overly
    warm

33
Dualism vs. Monism
  • The debate between dualists (Socrates and
    Plato), who believe that the mind can exist
    separately from the body, and monists
    (Aristotle), who believe the mind and body are
    different aspects of the same thing, continues
    today.
  • Are you a monist or dualist?

34
P-3 from IRM
  • Reverse the following
  • 3,6,7,8,10,12,15,17,20,22,24,25,
  • and 27
  • 15, 24, 33, 42, 51

35
  • Medieval period void of Psychological insight
  • Plague and the Church
  • Renewed interest

36
Renaissance and Enlightenment brought renewed
interest
37
Prescientific Psychology
  • Rene Descartes (1596-1650)

http//www.spacerad.com
http//ocw.mit.edu
Descartes, like Plato, believed in soul
(mind)-body separation (a Dualist), but wondered
how the immaterial mind and physical body
communicated.
38
Reflex Theory
  • He proposed a mechanism for automatic reaction in
    response to external events
  • external motions affect the peripheral ends of
    the nerve fibrils ,which in turn displace the
    central ends. As the central ends are displace,
    the pattern of interfibrillar space is rearranged
    and the flow of animal spirits is thereby
    directed into the approptiate nerves

39
handout
40
  • I thinktherefore I am.
  • Descartes believed that the only thing that he
    could prove was that he existed. All else was
    conjecture, based on previous assumptions.

41
Prescientific Psychology
  • Francis Bacon (1561-1626)

http//www.iep.utm.edu
Bacon is one of the founders of modern science,
particularly the experimental method.
42
Prescientific Psychology
  • John Locke (1632-1704)

biografieonline.it/img/bio/John_Locke.jpg
Locke held that the mind was a tabula rasa, or
blank sheet, at birth, and experiences wrote on
it.
43
  • http//www.ted.com/talks/steven_pinker_chalks_it_u
    p_to_the_blank_slate.html
  • Stop on inborn morality (745)
  • W2W- Is morality universal or relative?
  • Support your opinion with as much detail as
    possible

44
Prescientific Psychology
  • What is the relation of mind to the body?

Mind and body are connected Mind and body are distinct
The Hebrews Socrates
Aristotle Plato
Augustine Descartes
45
Prescientific Psychology
  • How are ideas formed?

Some ideas are inborn The mind is a blank slate
Socrates Aristotle
Plato Locke
46
Psychological Science is Born
  • Structuralism

Titchner (1867-1927)
Wundt (1832-1920)
Wundt and Titchener studied the elements (atoms)
of the mind by conducting experiments at Leipzig,
Germany, in 1879.
47
Lets have a little learning fun.
48
Famous Faces and Graphinitions
49
History of Psychology Graphic Timeline
  • See handout.
  • Read Prologue.
  • As you do so, gather information into the
    following graphic organizer.
  • Note Your textbook does not contain all
    necessary information.

50
Psychological Science is Born
  • Functionalism

James (1842-1910)
Mary Calkins
Influenced by Darwin, William James established
the school of functionalism, which opposed
structuralism.
51
Structuralism vs. Functionalism
  • Structuralism has its basis in Wundts early
    experimentation. Titchener established this
    school of thought.
  • Sought to identify what he mind and consciousness
    were (structure)
  • Attempted to classify the elements of the mind
    using introspection
  • Functionalism is based on William James idea
    that Psychology has practical applications to
    life
  • Sought to identify how the mind and consciousness
    worked (function)
  • i.e.we have fear and anger to aid in survival

52
Psychological Science is Born
  • The Unconscious Mind

Freud (1856-1939)
Sigmund Freud and his followers emphasized the
importance of the unconscious mind and its
effects on human behavior.
53
Freud
  • Developed early personality theory
  • Based on unconscious conflicts within
  • Also influenced greatly by early childhood
    experiences (lt6)
  • Problems arise in adolescence and early adulthood
  • Freuds popularity has declined, but he was a
    pioneer in the field (much more later)

54
Psychological Science Develops
  • Behaviorism

Skinner (1904-1990)
Watson (1878-1958)
Watson (1913) and later Skinner emphasized the
study of overt behavior as the subject matter of
scientific psychology.
55
Behaviorism is all about learned responses.
56
J.B. Watson
  • Behaviorist
  • Focused on learning
  • What we feel and do depends on associations we
    have made
  • Ex. We are afraid of dogs due to a bad experience
  • In other words, our experiences shape who we are
    through learning
  • Conditioning experiments on humans
  • Thought that good parenting could prevent most
    psych problems

57
JB Watson
  • If given complete control over persons
    environment from infancy, he could make them
    become anything he wanted (doctor or beggar)
  • Best known for Little Albert Experiment
  • Our fears are caused by frightening associations
    weve made to them in the past (operant
    conditioning)

58
B.F. Skinner
  • The quintessential behaviorist, Skinner believed
    that we are controlled by our environment and we
    become whatever out environment forces us to be
    (good or bad)
  • Taught pigeons how to do complex tasks by
    manipulating their environment
  • He did not believe that we truly have free will.
  • The choices that we make are a result of learned
    responses to reward and punishment
  • What do you think about this?

59
BF Skinner
  • Very strict religious upbringing (grandmothers
    love)
  • Not really a social butterfly (science books v.
    dating)
  • Strict behaviorist, though he mellowed with old
    age and viewed humans in less robotic terms
  • Thought all behaviors were the result of
    reinforcement
  • Basically, our personality is a accumulation of
    learned behaviors
  • If studying leads to good grades, you will
    continue to study

60
  • Make a list of about 10 behaviors that you have
    performed in the last 24 hours
  • Check the ones that you performed out of your own
    free will
  • Be ready to discuss

61
Psychological Science Develops
  • Humanistic Psychology

Maslow (1908-1970)
http//facultyweb.cortland.edu
Rogers (1902-1987)
http//www.carlrogers.dk
Maslow and Rogers emphasized current
environmental influences on our growth potential
and our need for love and acceptance.
62
Tonight
  • Read the remainder of the Prologue and finish the
    timeline.

63
The Finch That Stole Christmas
Darwin (1809-1882)
Darwin stated that nature selects those that best
enable the organism to survive and reproduce in a
particular environment.
64
Evolutionary Perspective
  • Looks to natural selection to explain behavior
    and mental processes such as memory, perception,
    and language.
  • Argues that social behaviors develop through
    genetics and inheritance
  • Adaptive functions of emotions promote survival
    (love, anger, etc.)

65
Many traits are inherited.
  • Draw a horizontal line and touch it with your
    ring fingerdoes your index finger touch also?
  • Interlock your handswhich thumb is on top?
    Practice wont help.
  • Tongue roll

66
W2W
  • The single best idea that anyone has ever had
  • Strategy D.
  • Natural Selection- From among chance variations,
    nature selects the traits that best enable the
    organism to survive

67
Fear? Disgust? Its All in Your Genes
  • Article Review

68
Other Important Figures
  • Dorothea Dix - helped reform inhumane treatments
    for psych disorders
  • William James- Father of American Psychology1st
    Psychology lecture I ever heard was the 1st I
    gave
  • Taught at Harvard/wrote 1st Psych textbook
  • Mary Whiton Calkins student of James and became
    the 1st woman president of the APA (denied PHD)
  • G. Stanley Hall - American student of Wundt who
    helped conduct 1st Psych experiment1st American
    to receive Ph.D. in Psychology
  • Margaret Floy Washburn -1st woman to receive
    Ph.D. in Psychology

69
Throughout the History of Psychology, many
different approaches/perspectives have
developed -such as Functionalism/ Structuralism,
Behaviorism, Humanism, etc.Today, modern
Psychologist view Psychology through one or more
of 7 lenses.
70
Psychologys Current Perspectives
Perspective Focus Sample Questions
Neuroscience/Biological How the body and brain enables emotions? What is physically going on in the body? How are messages transmitted in the body? How is blood chemistry linked with moods and motives?
Evolutionary How the natural selection of traits the promotes the perpetuation of ones genes? How does evolution influence behavior tendencies?
Behavior genetics How much our genes and our environments influence our individual differences? To what extent are psychological traits such as intelligence, personality, sexual orientation, and vulnerability to depression attributable to our genes? To our environment?
71
Psychologys Current Perspectives
Perspective Focus Sample Questions
Psychodynamic Differs from psychoanalysis due to its decreased focus on animal drives How behavior springs from unconscious drives and conflicts? How can someones personality traits and disorders be explained in terms of sexual and aggressive drives or as disguised effects of unfulfilled wishes and childhood traumas?
Behavioral How we learn observable responses? How do we learn to fear particular objects or situations? What is the most effective way to alter our behavior, say to lose weight or quit smoking?
72
Psychologys Current Perspectives
Perspective Focus Sample Questions
Cognitive How we encode, process, store and retrieve information? How we verbalize our thoughts internally. How do we use information in remembering? Reasoning? Problem solving?
Social-cultural How behavior and thinking vary across situations and cultures? How are we as Africans, Asians, Australians or North Americans alike as members of human family? As products of different environmental contexts, how do we differ?
73
Neighbor Reading
74
7 Perspectives Activity-Jigsaw
  • List scenarios on board
  • Pair w/ one student from another group and share
    analyses
  • discuss
  • Repeat process with two other individuals (3
    total)
  • Whole group discussion of selected topic

75
History/Perspectives Graphinitions
76
Gestalt?
  • Gestalt (organized whole) German school of
    thought that deals with visual perception
  • people tend to organize visual elements into
    groups or whole forms (figures)
  • instead of just a collection of simple lines and
    curves.
  • "The whole is greater than the sum of the parts"

77
Instead of a nose, mouth, and eyes perceived
distinctly, we see a face
78
Our mind perceives whole forms
79
Biopsychosocial Model
  • The Biopsychosocial model combines three levels
    of analysis, which provides for a more in-depth
    understanding.
  • Modern psychologists use an integrated or
    eclectic approach, rather than focusing on only
    one perspective
  • See obesity activity.

80
Psychologys Three Main Levels of Analysis
81
Smiling at someone in the hallway
  • brainstorm
  • biological reasons why we may do this (brain
    mechanisms, genetics predispositions, hormones,
    adaptive traits)
  • Psychological reasons
  • (learned fears/expectations, emotional
    responses, cognitive processing and perceptual
    interpretation)
  • Socio-cultural reasons
  • (cultural-societal expectations, peer/group
    influence, compelling modelsmedia, presence of
    others)

82
Its your turn
Psycho
  • Bio

Smiling
Social
83
Psychologys Approaches Recap
  • Earliest
  • Structuralism (Wundt/Titchener)
  • Functionalism (James)
  • Behaviorism (Watson and Skinner)
  • A little later
  • Psychoanalytic/Psychodynamic (Freud)
  • Gestalt (German school of thought )
  • Humanism (Maslow and Rogers)
  • Contemporary
  • Evolutionary
  • Biological (AKA- Neuroscience)
  • cognitive

84
Note The following bell ringer will be grades,
but it will count as a daily gradenot as a quiz.
85
Bell Ringer (History and Approaches)
  • The goal of Structuralism was to determine the
    basic _______ of the mind through the use of
    __________.
  • Opposing ________ (the founder of Structuralism)
    and inspired by the writings of ________,
    Functionalism differed in the sense that it
    focused on the _______ _________ of behavior and
    mental processes.
  • Adaptive functions
  • Behaviorists like __________ and _________ felt
    that human behavior and mental processes are the
    result of learned __________ that we have made
    between our previous actions and there
    consequences.

86
  • 4. Briefly describe Darwins key contributions to
    the field of Psychology.
  • 5. __________- helped reform inhumane treatments
    for psych disorders
  • Dorothea Dix
  • 6. ___________ student of James and became the
    1st woman president of the APA
  • Mary Whiton Calkins
  • 7. __________-1st woman to receive Ph.D. in
    Psychology
  • Margaret Floy Washburn

87
If the therapist pictured below subscribes to
Freuds Psychoanalytic theory, what will be the
goal of the session? Which methods may be used
to accomplish this goal? Describe the
conversation that would likely take place between
the therapist and Marge.
88
  • 9. This model combines the three levels of
    analysis.
  • 10.
  • A. Identify two thinkers that believed humans
    are born with innate ideas.
  • B. Identify two thinkers that believed humans
    are born with a blank slate.
  • 11. Critical Thinking Using deductive reasoning,
    describe the fundamental difference between
    Humanism and Psychoanalysis.

89
Psychological Associations Societies
  • The American Psychological Association is the
    largest organization of psychology with 160,000
    members world-wide, followed by the British
    Psychological Society with 34,000 members.

90
Education Necesario
  • If youre looking into a career as a
    Psychologist
  • BA/BS
  • offer few opportunities
  • With an MS
  • Marriage and Family Therapist
  • Clinical Social Worker
  • Teach in a 2-year college
  • With a PHD
  • May teach at university level
  • May enter private practice as psychologist in
    most states

91
Clinical Psychology vs. Psychiatry
  • A clinical psychologist (Ph.D.) studies,
    assesses, and treats troubled people with
    psychotherapy.
  • Psychiatrists on the other hand are medical
    professionals (M.D.) who use treatments like
    drugs and psychotherapy to treat psychologically
    diseased patients.

92
Psychiatry vs. PsychologyRead Aloud
  • Psychiatrists (M.D.) go to medical school and
    receive training in the treatment of psych
    disorders during a specialized residency.
    Typically, psychiatrists treat psychological
    disorders with medically based treatments, often
    prescribing drugs in addition to, or instead of,
    psychotherapy.

93
  • Clinical Psychologists earn a Ph.D. in clinical
    psychology, which includes a specialized
    internship in which they practice different
    psychologically based treatments, or
    psychotherapies. Typically, clinical
    psychologists use psychotherapy to treat mental
    illness.
  • CP Version couchnot Prozac

94
Two Types of Research
  • Basic Research (Research Psychologist) pure
    science that aims to increase the scientific
    knowledge base
  • More concerned with discovering conceptsless
    practical in nature
  • Example Developmental Psychologists attempt to
    understand how we change throughout the lifespan
  • Applied Research (applied Psycholgist)-
    scientific study that aims to solve practical
    problems
  • More practical in nature
  • Example Industrial-organizational Psychologist

95
Industrial/Organizational
  • Work with management to improve working
    conditions in order to
  • Increase efficiency
  • Increase profit
  • Foster positive company image
  • Workplace design
  • work with employees on personal issues that may
    interfere with work

96
Being an Industrial/Org. Psychologist
  • Analyze your classroom
  • Are considerations made whose purpose is to
    increase student efficiency?
  • Desks (design and seating arrangement)
  • Lighting
  • Paint color
  • Location of clock
  • Location of teachers desk
  • Etc.

97
How about retail /grocery stores?
  • Milk is usually at the back of the store
  • Popular item, which forces people to walk through
    the store
  • Children cereal at eye level
  • Soothing music
  • Comfortable temp.
  • Impulse aisle
  • Red

98
Research Analogy
  • Basic Research Structuralism
  • Applied Research __________
  • Complete the analogy ,and provide a persuasive
    rationale for your guess.
  • .

99
  • Basic research is much like structuralism,
    whose adherents wanted to discover what the mind
    and consciousness were.
  • Applied research is much like functionalism,
    whose practitioners wanted to discover how the
    mind and consciousness worked and how they helped
    people adapt to circumstances

100
Major Subfields Within Psychology
  • Biological
  • Clinical
  • Cognitive
  • Counseling
  • Developmental
  • Educational Many others
  • Experimental
  • Human factors
  • Industrial-organizational
  • Personality
  • Psychometric
  • social

101
Subfields G.O./K.I.M. Activity
  • Because we dont have time to cover the subfields
    of Psychology in class, I want you to complete a
    graphic organizer outside of class
  • See Appendix A4-A8 and provide brief summaries of
    each
  • -Or-
  • KIM Activity
  • Memory clue can be visual, or utilize some other
    type of mnemonic device (acronym, narrative
    chain, etc.)
  • Each memory clue should clearly illustrate the
    role of each specialty.
  • -or-
  • Trivial Pursuit Activity (16 wedges) Provide a
    3-word summary of each subfield
  • You may see these again (on quiz or test)

102
Psychologys Subfields Research
Psychologist What she does
Biological Explore the links between brain and mind.
Developmental Study changing abilities from womb to tomb.
Cognitive Study how we perceive, think, and solve problems.
Personality Investigate our persistent traits.
Social Explore how we view and affect one another.
103
Psychologys Subfields Research
Data APA 1997
104
Psychologys Subfields Applied
Psychologist What she does
Clinical Studies, assesses, and treats people with psychological disorders
Counseling Helps people cope with academic, vocational, and marital challenges.
Educational Studies and helps individuals in school and educational settings
Industrial/ Organizational Studies and advises on behavior in the workplace.
105
Psychologys Subfields Applied
Data APA 1997
106
Effective Study Skills Graphic Organizer
  • pp. 15 and 16

107
Close-up
Your Study of Psychology Survey, Question, Read,
Review and Reflect (SQ3R)
  • Survey What you are about to read, including
    chapter outlines and section heads.
  • Question Ask questions. Make notes.
  • Read Make sure you read outlines, sections and
    chapters in entirety.
  • Review Margin definitions. Study learning
    outcomes.
  • Reflect On what you learn. Test yourself with
    quizzes.

108
Close-up
Additional Study Hints
  • Distribute your time.
  • Listen actively in class.
  • Overlearn.
  • Be a smart test-taker.

109
Nature/Nurture Persuasive Essay
  • Select a topic virtuosity, Criminal behavior,
    religiosity, alcoholism, sexual orientation, etc.

110
Free-Response Question
  • Psychology has a variety of complementary yet
    incomplete perspectives that help us understand
    behavior. How might each of the following
    perspectives explain aggression?
  • Biological
  • Cognitive
  • Evolutionary
  • Social-Cultural

111
9-point questionAllow 1 point for an adequate
discussion of each of the following concepts or
terms from each perspective.
112
Biological (3 points)
  • Should mention the physical reaction that
    occursdifferent areas of the brain are active
    when someone is acting aggressivelyheart rate,
    etc.
  • Should mention heredity. Some could have a
    genetic predisposition to act aggressivelymay be
    born with a more aggressive temperament.

113
Cognitive (2 points)
  • Should include patterns of thoughtsacting
    aggressively affects ones thinking.
  • Our interpretation of events could affect
    aggressive behavior.
  • Include positive internal sentences

114
Evolutionary (2 points)
  • Genetic influence - Aggression might have
    facilitated survival and the subsequent passing
    of genes from one generation to the next.
  • Natural Selection of traits From among chance
    variations, nature selects the traits that best
    enable an organism to survive and reproduce in a
    particular environment
  • Adaptive function of these traits

115
Social-Cultural (2 points)
  • Differing cultural influence What is seen as
    aggressive in one culture might not be seen as
    normal in another, depending on the cultural
    context.
  • The setting or situation might affect aggressive
    thinking and behavior (maybe surrounded by group
    of friends, whom he or she doesnt want to look
    foolish in front of)

116
Prologue QUIZ tomorrow?
117
Timeline Grading Rubric
  • All 30 terms/names included and identified (60
    points)
  • 10 meaningful visuals included (20)
  • Followed directions
  • Text boxes used (4)
  • Timeline straight (4 straight edge used)
  • Timeline is color-coded (4-green,blue,red)
  • Handwriting legible or printed (4)
  • WOW factor (4 pointsawarded to those who
    exceeded expectations)
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