AI Summary
[DOCUMENT_TYPE: study_guide]
**What This Document Is**
This is a study guide designed to help students prepare for the first exam in Introductory Psychology (PSY 1305) at Baylor University, as of Fall 2020. It’s a focused review of key concepts and historical figures covered in the course’s initial material.
**Why This Document Matters**
This study guide is essential for students enrolled in this specific psychology course who are aiming to effectively prepare for their first exam. It serves as a concentrated overview, highlighting the core areas the exam will likely assess. It’s most useful when used *in conjunction with* course lectures, readings, and other assigned materials – it’s not a replacement for those.
**Common Limitations or Challenges**
This study guide provides a framework for review, but it doesn’t offer in-depth explanations or practice problems. It won’t teach you the material if you haven’t already engaged with it through the course. It also reflects the content as it was organized in Fall 2020; course content may change in subsequent semesters.
**What This Document Provides**
This study guide includes concise summaries of:
* Early schools of thought in psychology: Structuralism (Wilhelm Wundt), Functionalism (William James), Behaviorism (Watson & Skinner), Freudian Psychology, Humanistic Psychology, and Cognitive Psychology.
* The ongoing debate of Nature vs. Nurture, including twin studies and evolutionary psychology.
* Key concepts like the scientific method, theory construction, and operational definitions.
* An overview of different approaches to psychological analysis, including the biopsychosocial approach.
* The “testing effect” and its impact on memory.
This preview *does not* include detailed explanations of experimental designs, specific research findings, practice questions, or a comprehensive list of vocabulary terms. The full document offers a more complete, though still concise, review of the material.