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motivation

College Admission Essay

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When you are waiting at the doctor?s office, what do you do? Grab a magazine? Pull out your phone? In these activities, you are searching for entertainment. Even in the shortest periods of down-time, this search is instinctual in our minds. Widespread access to entertainment, whether it be television, cell phone games, or instant messaging, results in the expectation of instant gratification, this has had the most prominent negative impact to modern society. Instant gratification reduces an individual's attention span, especially when faced with undesirable tasks, thereby reducing productivity and increasing procrastination (example: the CofC application completed the night before it was due).

Lessons From Faliure

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Lessons from failure: Why we try, try again Your mindset after facing failure can make all the difference By Bethany Brookshire 7:00am, November 2, 2015 EMail Everyone experiences some failures when trying tough things. Focusing on what they can learn for next time keeps some people from giving up, new brain data show.? EMail Reddit Google+ CHICAGO ? ?Everyone experiences failures. But not everyone brushes themselves off and tries again. A new study shows that focusing on what can be learned from a failure appears to help people persevere ? with a better chance of success the next time.

Myers 8e Review (Prologue-Ch.13)

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12 WEEK COMP REVIEW (PROLOGUE-CH. 13) UNIT ONE: RESEARCH, NEUROSCIENCE, & GENETICS (PRO.-CH. 3) Random sample: sample that fairly represents a population because each member has an equal chance of inclusion. Hindsight bias: the tendency to believe, after learning an outcome, that one would have foreseen it. (Also known as the I-knew-it-all along phenomenon.) The false consensus effect: the tendency to overestimate the extent to which others share our beliefs and behaviors. Survey research: a technique for ascertaining the self-reported attitudes or behaviors of people, usually by questioning a representative, random sample of them.

Chapter 10: Psychology: Themes and Variations, Canadian Edition

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Motivation and Emotion Motivation majority of motivation is unconscious sexual motivation is pretty prominent ex. study in the Netherlands found that women dressed more scantily when ovulating motivation: direction/goal of motives strength of motives reflect biological and psychosocial needs drive: internal state of tension that motivates an organism to engage in activities that should reduce this tension (restore equilibrium, homeostasis) motives can be overridden by conscious thought biological motives: hunger motive thirst motive sex motive temperature motive excretory motive sleep/rest motive activity motive (optimal level of stimulation/arousal) aggression motive social motives: achievement motive social dominance hierarchy affiliation motive (social bonds) need for acceptance

Chapter 12 Outline Notes Psychology Weiten 7th Edition

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Grant Clay Period 3 11/16/08 AP Psychology Outline Chapter 12: Personality Red ? Definition Blue - Important Points Green - Important People & Contributions Personality ? An Individual?s Unique Constellation of Consistent Behavioral Traits. Personality Trait ? Durable Disposition to Behave in a Particular Way in a Variety of Situations. Factor Analysis ? Raymond Cattell - Correlations Among many Variables are Analyzed to Identify Closely related Clusters of Variables. 5-Factor Model of Personality Traits Robert McCrae & Paul Costa Extraversion ? Outgoing, Sociable, Upbeat, Friendly, Assertive. Neuroticism ? Anxious, Hostile, Self-Conscious, Insecure, Vulnerable. Openness to Experience ? Curiosity, Flexibility, Imagitiveness, Artistic, Unconventional.

Psychology

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Introduction to Psychology (Section 2B) Individual Report Topic: Reducing Academic Procrastination Introduction Procrastination is a well-known problem among students in secondary schools and universities. According to Laura J. Solomon & Esther D. Rothblum(1984), procrastination is experiencing subject discomfort from the act of needlessly delaying tasks. What are the reasons causing students to procrastinate? How can we reduce procrastination? These are the questions we always want to ask since procrastination is regarded as a disturbing phenomenon that we want to get rid of it. (Steel, P., 2007). In this research, we hope to have an in-depth understanding of academic procrastination and seek practical solutions for it. Project Summary Research Aim:

Motivation and Emotion

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Grant Clay Period 3 10/25/08 AP Psychology Outline Chapter 10: Motivation & Emotion Red ? Definition Blue - Important Points Green - Important People & Contributions Motivational Theories & Concepts Motivation ? Involves Goal-Directed Behavior Drive Theories Homeostasis ? A State of Physiological Equilibrium or Stability. Drive ? An Internal State of Tension that Motivates an Organism to Engage in Activities that should Reduce this Tension. When you Experience Discomfort, An Internal Drive motivates you to Establish Homeostasis again. Drive Theories Don?t Explain All Motivation. Incentive Theory Incentive ? An External Goal that has the Capacity to Motivate Behavior. Incentive Theory revolves around External Stimuli, Not Internal like Drive Theory.

Personality

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Grant Clay Period 3 11/16/08 AP Psychology Outline Chapter 12: Personality Red ? Definition Blue - Important Points Green - Important People & Contributions Personality ? An Individual?s Unique Constellation of Consistent Behavioral Traits. Personality Trait ? Durable Disposition to Behave in a Particular Way in a Variety of Situations. Factor Analysis ? Raymond Cattell - Correlations Among many Variables are Analyzed to Identify Closely related Clusters of Variables. 5-Factor Model of Personality Traits Robert McCrae & Paul Costa Extraversion ? Outgoing, Sociable, Upbeat, Friendly, Assertive. Neuroticism ? Anxious, Hostile, Self-Conscious, Insecure, Vulnerable. Openness to Experience ? Curiosity, Flexibility, Imagitiveness, Artistic, Unconventional.

Chapter 1 Preview Questions pg 1-18

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Preview Questions: Ch 1 pg1-18 What were Wundt?s and Hall?s key ideas and accomplishments? Wundt was the ?father? of psychology in the sense that he campaigned for it to be its own school of study rather than mixed with philosophy and physiology. He also established the first formal research laboratory for psychology as well as the first journal devoted to psychology. Hall, who had studied under Wundt, established America?s first research laboratory for psychology and America?s first psychology journal. He also influenced the establishment of the American Psychological Association (APA). What were the chief tenets of structuralism and functionalism?

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