Evaluations Flashcards
What is evaluation?
- weighing up the strengths and limitations, the positives and negatives of something
How do we evaluate?
- you need to know what critical questions to ask of a theory/therapy/method/piece of research
- you need an evaluation toolkit
What are the 6 critical questions we can ask of each psychological approach?
DRANES!!!
- D = is the approach’s explanation of behaviour DETERMINISTIC?
- R = is the approach’s explanation of behaviour REDUCTIONIST?
- A = does the approach have useful practical APPLICATIONS?
- N = does the approach fall on the NATURE OR NURTURE side of the debate or is it interactionist?
- E = does the approach have much supporting EVIDENCE?
- S = is the approach considered SCIENTIFIC?
What is determinism?
- all behaviour has a cause BEYOND THE CONTROL of the individual
- humans are therefore unable to choose how to behave
- therefore humans do not have free will
- choice is an illusion
- we are puppets
What is reductionism?
- complex behaviours are broken down and understood in terms of their component parts / building blocks
- some psychologists argue that taking this approach is an over-simplification of what it means to be human, and overlooks the complexity of behaviours
- taking human behaviours and breaking them down to look at individual pieces (IDENTIFY CAUSE)
- without everything together there is no meaning
What are applications?
- can the approach be used as a form of therapy?
- has it made any positive contributions to the way society is run?
- this is important because one of the main goals of psychology and other sciences is to improve society for everyone
- does the theory have practical and theoretical applications?
What is nature, nurture or interactionism?
- nature = innate factors are more important than social factors
- nurture = social factors are more important than innate factors
- interactionism = behaviour is caused by innate and social factors working together and BOTH play a role
- nature and nurture are reductionist
- interactionism is a more complete explanation
What is evidence?
- are the explanations of behaviour derived from this approach backed up by (supported by) solid evidence?
- important because the more evidence an explanation has to support it, the more credible the explanation is
What is scientific?
- are the explanations of behaviour derived from the approach objective and open to being tested experimentally?
- important because data can be gathered to support the ideas
- the more supporting evidence that exists, the more credible the explanation
- or are they subjective?
ie could they be interpreted in many different ways by different people? - we want to avoid this because we are unable to draw valid, meaningful conclusions about behaviour from subjective ideas
How do you write up an evaluation?
- paragraph structure is key for top marks
- making a statement that’s backed up by examples, then explained in terms of its relative strengths/weaknesses is the way to go
- use the sandwich structure
What is the sandwich structure?
1.) Bread slice
- make your point
- state theme of evaluation
- say whether strength or weakness
2.) Meat
- explain
- why is your theme strong/weak in the light of the information you are evaluating?
- what is good or bad about it?
3.) Cheese
- give an example
- use some specific information/knowledge to back up what you’re saying
4.) Bread slice
- link back to question
- summarise point/theme you are evaluating (mini conclusion)
- do this by stating whether this theme of evaluation is more or less important that the other themes for the research/approach/explanation/therapy