Describe the psychological impact of attending college
What will be an ideal response?
Thousands of studies reveal broad psychological changes from the freshman to the senior year of college. Students become better at reasoning about problems that have no clear solution, identifying the strengths and weaknesses of opposing sides of complex issues, and reflecting on the quality of their thinking. Their attitudes and values also broaden. They show increased interest in literature, the performing arts, and philosophical and historical issues and greater tolerance for racial and ethnic diversity. Also, college leaves its mark on moral reasoning by fostering concern with individual rights and human welfare, sometimes expressed in political activism. Finally, exposure to multiple worldviews encourages young people to look more closely at themselves. During the college years, students develop greater self-understanding, enhanced self-esteem, and a firmer sense of identity. The more students interact with diverse peers in academic and extracurricular settings, the more they benefit cognitively—in grasping the complex causes of events, thinking critically, and generating effective problem solutions. Also, interacting with racially and ethnically mixed peers—both in courses exploring diversity issues and in out-of-class settings—predicts gains in civic engagement. And students who connect their community service experiences with their classroom learning show large cognitive gains.
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Houdini is a normally developing one-year-old watching a magic act. The magician he is observing has just rolled a ball into what looks like a solid wall. However, when the ball reached the wall, the ball appeared to roll through it. According to research findings by Baillargeon, one would expect that Houdini's most likely reaction would involve a. disinterest and immediate looking away
b. surprise, yet immediate looking away. c. disinterest, yet the infant will stare at the spot the ball appeared to go through the wall. d. surprise, and the infant will stare at the spot the ball appeared to go through the wall.
A pigeon's behaviour is reinforced for pecking images of Picasso paintings but not for pecking images of Monet paintings. After such training, it correctly pecks pictures of other Cubist artists it has never seen before but does not peck other never-before-seen impressionistic paintings. This example illustrates the behavioural processes of _____; in cognitive terms, each Picasso painting
represents a(n) _____ of a category. A) positive and negative reinforcement; prototype B) positive and negative reinforcement; exemplar C) generalization and discrimination; prototype D) generalization and discrimination; exemplar
What observation led Mach and von Ehrenfels towards the main ideas of Gestalt psychology?
a. Melodies persist despite radical alterations in tempo, key, or instrument. b. People from different cultures can have similar perceptions. c. Even infants are capable of perception in addition to the more primitive sensation. d. Paintings are recognizable as real even though they are only in two dimensions.
This condition is sometimes referred to as "old eyes."
a) myopia b) hyperopia c) presbyopia d) ageopia