James Deegan: Saucon Valley SD Supervisor of Assessment and Instruction
Information provided by:
John A. Johnson
Last modified 08-26-2003
During the 1948 convention of the American Psychological Association, a group of educational psychologists decided it would be useful to classify different levels of understanding that students can achieve in a course. In 1956, after extensive research on educational goals, the group published their findings in a book edited by Harvard professor Benjamin S. Bloom. Bloom's book lists six levels of intellectual understanding, summarized in the chart below.
Label for Level of Understanding |
Nature of Understanding in the Level |
Knowledge |
Recognizing and recalling information, including
Comprehension
Understanding the meaning of information, including
Application
Applying general rules, methods, or principles to a new, specific situation, including
Analysis
Identifying the organization and patterns within a system by identifying its component parts and the relationships among the components.
Synthesis
Discovering or creating new connections, generalizations, patterns, or perspectives.
Evaluation
Using evidence and reasoned argument to judge how well a proposal would accomplish a particular purpose.
(Adapted from: Bloom, B.S. (Ed.) (1956). Taxonomy of educational objectives: The classification of educational goals: Handbook I, cognitive domain. New York ; Toronto: Longmans, Green.)
Because PSY 002 is Penn State's basic, introductory course in psychology, I expect students to achieve primarily the first three levels of understanding in the course. Consequently, almost all of the multiple choice questions in our exams aim to assess those first three levels of understanding. I expect more of the three higher levels--analysis, synthesis, and evaluation--in my advanced 200- and 400-level courses. In those courses I usually assess understanding with projects, essay questions, or papers rather than with multiple-choice questions. You will probably find that your other instructors tend to grade introductory and upper-level courses differently.
1. Which of the following is one of the major approaches to psychology?
a. psychoanalysis
b. structuralism
c. psychiatry
d. New Age Movement
Correct answer: |
A |
The textbook describes six major approaches to psychology on pages WIP5-WIP10: behavioral, psychoanalytic, humanistic, cognitive, neurobiological, and sociocultural. This was also covered in the class lecture on Modern perspectives in psychology. Structuralism is an older approach that died out completely. I did not cover it in class; it is described on pages WIP4-WIP5. Psychiatry is a specific branch of medicine, not a major approach to psychology. The New Age Movement, which I did not cover, is described on page WIP12 as a pseudopsychology. |
2. Sensation, perception, and memory are of particular
interest to which group of contemporary psychologists?
a. psychoanalysts
b. behaviorists
c. humanistic psychologists
d. cognitive psychologists
Correct answer: |
D |
Areas of specialization in psychology are described on pages WIP15-WIP17 of the textbook. Sensation, perception and memory are described in the textbook as topics that involve pure (that is, basic) experimental research (page WIP16). I talked about these areas in our class on Psychology's careers and areas of specialization. I was more specific than the textbook in my lecture, describing these three areas as part of the field of cognition. |
2. Using operational definitions answers which question?
a. who
b. why
c. what
d. how
Correct answer: |
C |
To answer this question correctly, you have to understand two concepts: (1) the What-How-Why questions posed by scientists (Who is not one of the questions, so answer (a) can be eliminated); and |
2. Why did John B. Watson reject the structuralist study of mental events?
a. He believed that structuralism relied too heavily on scientific methods.
b. He rejected the concept that psychologists should study observable behavior.
c. He believed that scientists should focus on what is objectively observable.
d. He actually embraced both structuralism and functionalism.
Correct answer: |
C |
Both the textbook (page WIP5-6) and Lecture 2 (History of basic and applied psychology), emphasize that Watson thought he could make psychology more scientific by restricting itself to what was objectively observable by several persons, that is, observable stimuli in the environment and the observable behaviors that are triggered by the stimuli. Comprehending an issue means understanding the main points. For this question, you would hopefully not be distracted by the technical terms "structuralism" and "functionalism" (which I did not even talk about in class) but target right in on Watson's main point--that in his opinion a scientific psychology must restrict itself to observables. |
1. Explaining a student's poor performance on an exam to the unfair
difficulty level of the questions refers to what kind of cause?
a. immediate, external cause
b. immediate, internal cause
c. developmental cause
d. necessary and sufficient cause
e. weak cause
Correct answer: |
A |
I talked about different types of causes of behavior on the first day of class. There really is such a concept as a necessary and sufficient cause, but I didn't talk about this in class and it doesn't apply to this example. Any cause outside of a person is an external cause, and the difficulty level of the test is a property of the test. Possible internal causes for poor performance might have been lack of motivation to study, low intelligence, or sleepiness. Developmental causes refer to history, which is not mentioned here. I never mentioned weak causes. |
2. A researcher shows erotic films to one group of subjects and violent films to another group of subjects. The researcher then assesses the cooperativeness of each group of subjects. The independent variable in this study is
a. the level of cooperativeness.
b. the type of film seen.
c. the level of sexual arousal in subjects.
d. the level of aggressiveness in subjects.
Correct answer: |
B |
The independent variable describes how the groups of subjects in an experiment are treated differently by the experimenter (see textbook, page MET-16 or your notes for the lecture on the Experimental method in psychology). In this example, the difference is in the type of film they were shown. The films might result in differences in (c) sexual arousal or (d) aggressiveness, but these were not even studied by the researcher. Option |
(Information provided by permission Dr. Dawn Zimmarro University of Texas)
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