Applied History of Psychology

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By: Andrean Rule Bomediano


Welcome to our Applied History of Psychology Wikibook. This project was the efforts of a graduate course in History and Systems in Psychology, HDP 3204 intersession class 2007 at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto (OISE/UT). This book represents a history of psychology--not the only one and certainly not a complete one, but definitely an interesting one and one that represents the varied interests of the students in this particular class. We hope you enjoy it and find it useful.

The initial structure of this book emerged out of our individual interests, prior knowledges, and research contributions to this course. We first briefly acknolwedge early thinkers that influenced the development of the discipline of psychology (Part I). Then, we address the history of various area of inquiries that are highly relevant to our work. These broad areas include developmental theories (Part II), the field of intelligence and assessment (Part III), as well as the various approaches to understanding and treating psychological difficulties (IV). Finally, we also created a special topic section to provide space for particular topics that can "stand on their own." (Part V).

We welcome your comments, additions, and contributions. We invite you to consult our Introduction for more information.

Contents

[edit] Introduction

Provides a brief overview and introduction to our Wikibook, including our guiding question.

[edit] Part I: Early Contributions to the Field of Psychology

This section starts from approximately 600 BC and takes us through to the development of Psychology as a Science. Some thinkers discussed include Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Hobbes, Locke, Gall, Mesmer, and Wundt.

  1. Philosophical Roots of Psychology Development stage: 25% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Reviews some of the thinking put forth by Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Hobbes, and Locke.
  2. Pseudoscientific Schools of Thought Development stage: 50% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Reviews some of the theories and practices of Franz Anton Mesmer and includes brief mention of Franz Joseph Gall.
  3. Establishment of the Field Development stage: 50% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Contains a very brief history of Wilhem Maximilian Wundt, including some of his ideas and methods.

[edit] Part II: Models of Development

  1. Conceptualization of childhood Development stage: 50% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Reviews models of human development and how the concept of "childhood" has changed throughout history.
  2. Attachment Development stage: 75% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Reviews the development of attachment theory, from the early work or Lorenz and Harlow, continuing to the work of Bowbly and Ainsworth.
  3. Personality Development stage: 50% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Reviews Freud’s well-know Psychosexual Theory of Development. Karen Horney’s contributions to the field of personality development and her criticisms of Freud are presented as an alternative.
  4. Cognitive Development Development stage: 75% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Reviews the Piagetian Model of Children's Thinking and its criticisms. Lev Vygotsky’s theory of Sociocultural Development is presented as an alternative to Jean Piaget’s work.
  5. Social Development Development stage: 75% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Reviews Erickon's life span development stage theory as well as contributions and criticisms of his theory.
  6. Moral Development Development stage: 100% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Reviews Kohlberg and Gilligan's theories of moral development in children.
  7. Controversies Development stage: 50% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Discusses some of developmental psychology's longstanding questions and controversies, such as the issue of ‘active’ or ‘passive’ development, continuity of human development versus development in stages, and the nature/nurture debate.

[edit] Part III: Models of Learning, Intelligence and Assessment

  1. Learning Theories Development stage: 75% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Reviews the development of Learning Theory from Watson to Pavlov's classical conditioning, Skinner's operant conditioning, and finally, Bandura's Social Learning Theory.
  2. Theories on Intelligence Development stage: 75% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Reviews Gardner's Multiple Intelligence Theory, Sternberg Triarchic Theory of Human Intelligence, Spearman's work, emotional intelligance, dynamic assessment and cross-battery assessment.
  3. Models of Assessment Development stage: 75% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Briefly reviews the history of psychological testing, provides a timeline of early milestones in the history of testing, and discusses heredity, historiometry, and eugenics, as well as intelligence testing, personality testing, and interest inventories.

[edit] Part IV: "Mental Disorders": Identification, Treatment and Controversies

  1. DSM and Other Diagnostic Systems Development stage: 50% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Reviews a brief history and introduction to the Diagnostic and Statistics Manual for Psychiatric Disorders (DSM), the utility of the DSM, validity and reliability issues, stigma and damage of labelling, critical issues and other diagnostic systems.
  2. Clinical Treatment Development stage: 75% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Reviews several types of psychotherapy including Psychodynamic Therapy, Client Centred Therapy, Cognitive and Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, Existential Therapy, Group Therapy, Gestalt Therapy, Mindfulness Based Therapy, Emotion-Focused Therapy, and Solution Focused Brief Therapy. Treatment Effectiveness and Psychopharmacology are also touched upon.
  3. Specific Disorders Development stage: 25% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Introduces perspectives on psychological trauma and reviews the history, treatment, and assessment of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD), and Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD).

[edit] Part V: Special Topics

  1. History of Research on Attention Development stage: 100% (as of June 14, 2007)
    Reviews the history of research on attention and human information processing, focusing on major contributors in this area including John Ridley Stroop, Donald Broadbent, and Anne Treisman.

[edit] References

[edit] Project participants