- •Psychology
- •Contents
- •Передмова
- •Part I. Introducing psychology Text 1. Special Fields of Psychology
- •Assignments
- •Text 2. Physiological Psychology
- •Assignments
- •Text 3. Gestalt Psychology
- •Assignments
- •Text 4. Social Psychology
- •Assignments
- •Part II. Family psychology Text 1. Family Relations
- •Assignments
- •Text 2. Cohabitation.
- •Assignments
- •Text 3. Family Problems
- •Assignments:
- •Text 4. Single-Parent Families
- •Assignments
- •Text 5. Stepfamilies
- •Assignments
- •Text 6. Ten Tips for Building a Marriage
- •Assignments
- •Text 7.The Difficult Child
- •Assignments
- •Text 8. Handling Aggressive Children
- •Assignments
- •Агресивні діти
- •Part III. Psychology of sex relations. Behavioral therapies.
- •3.1 Psychology of sex relations Text 1.Can Men and Women Be Friends?
- •Assignments
- •Text 2. Men and Women Really do Think Differently
- •Assignments
- •Text 3. Psychological Problems of Sex Relations
- •Assigments
- •3.2. Behavioral therapies Text 1. The Approaches to Therapy.
- •Assignments
- •Text 2. Reciprocal Inhibition
- •Assignments
- •Text 3. Desensitization in Real Life Situations
- •Assignments
- •Text 4. Other Methods of Treating Psychological Disorders.
- •Assignments
- •Text 5. Assertive Training
- •Assignments
- •Part IV. Temperament. Emotions
- •4.1 Temperament Text1. Personality: What is Temperament?
- •Assignments
- •Text 2.The Four Temperaments in General
- •Assignments
- •Text 3. How to Define Your Temperament
- •Assignments
- •Text 4. Personality and Handwriting
- •Vocabulary notes
- •Assignments
- •Text 5. Left-Handed People
- •Assignments
- •Про що можливо дізнатися з почерку?
- •4.2 Emotions Тext 1. What Are Emotions?
- •Assignments
- •Text 2. Kinds of Emotions
- •Vocabulary notes
- •Assignments
- •Text 3. Loving
- •Assignments
- •Text 4. Fear and Anger
- •Assignments
- •Text 5. Long-Тerm Arousal
- •Assignments
- •Text 6. Attributions
- •Assignments
- •Text 7. Locus of Control
- •Assignments
- •Part V. Human feelings. Phobias.
- •5.1 Human feelings. Text 1. Our Feelings as the Motor of Our Life
- •Assignments
- •Text 2. How do We Loose Our Feelings?
- •Assignments
- •Text 3. Negative Feelings
- •Assignments
- •Text 4. Find Constructive Ways to Release Your Anger
- •Assignments
- •Text 5. Shyness is a Common Social Problem
- •Assignments
- •Text 6. What is Modesty?
- •Assignments
- •5.2 Phobias Text 1. Social Phobia
- •Assignments
- •Text 2. Facts about Phobias
- •Assignments
- •Text 3. Social Phobia in Children
- •Text 4. Panic
- •Assignments
- •Part VI. Stress Text 1. Types of Stress
- •Vocabulary notes
- •Assignments
- •Text 2. Common Stress Symptoms
- •Assignments
- •Text 3. Stress Areas
- •Vocabulary notes
- •Assignments
- •Text 4. Priorities in Managing Stress
- •Vocabulary notes
- •Assignments
- •Text 5. Stress Management and Communication
- •Assignments
- •Text 6. Stress Management Techniques
- •Assignments
- •Text 7. Steps to Combat Stress
- •Assignments
- •Part VII.Sleep and dreams. Memory and brain.
- •7.1. Sleep and dreams Text 1. Sleep
- •Assignments
- •Text 2. The Mystery of Sleep
- •Assignments
- •Text 3 . Sweet Dreams
- •Assignments
- •Text 4. The Meaning of Dreams
- •Assignments
- •Text 5. Freud and Dreams
- •Assignments
- •Text 6. Body Clock
- •Assignments
- •7.2 Memory and brain. Text 1. Memory
- •Assignments
- •Text 2. Inside the Brain.
- •Assignments
- •Text 3. Hypnotherapy
- •Assignments
- •Part VIII. Psychology of learning. Psychology in work.
- •8.1 Psychology of learning. Text 1. Asociation Learning
- •Assignments
- •Text 2. Treating Phobias.
- •Vocabulary notes
- •Assignments
- •Text 3. Operant Conditioning
- •Assignments
- •Text 4. Imitation and Modelling
- •Assignments
- •Text 5. Schemas
- •Vocabulary notes
- •Assignments
- •Text 6. The Triarchic Theory of Intelligence
- •Vocabulary notes
- •Assignments
- •8.2. Psychology in work Text 1. Psychological Theories about Unemployment and Retirement
- •Latent functions of working
- •Assignments
- •Text 2. Retirement and Responsibility
- •Assignments
- •Text 3. Leadership
- •Assignments
- •Text 4. Choosing People for Jobs
- •Assignments
- •Список літератури
Assigments
I. Memorize the following words and phrases:
to transcend |
переступати межу |
inconsistent |
непослідовний, суперечливий |
genuine feelings |
щирі почуття |
stubbornness |
впертість |
sorrowful man |
вбита горем людина |
furious |
розгніваний, оскаженілий |
vulnerable |
уразливий, ранимий |
affectionate |
люблячий, ніжний |
to complain |
скаржитись |
to withhold |
утримуватися (від чогось); відмовляти (в чомусь) |
blackmail |
шантаж |
predictable |
передбачуваний |
to gossip |
пліткувати |
tender |
ніжний, делікатний, турботливий |
II. Suggest the Ukrainian equivalents of the words and phrases below. Use them in sentences:
emotions inconsistent with the gender stereotypes; to show anger and stubbornness; to express happiness/ sadness; to be on the brink of disaster; angry man is common; livid woman is rare; frightened woman; heart-to-heart conversation; to create extramarital relationships; to suppress man; to withhold sex as punishment or blackmail; to avoid gossiping; neither superior nor inferior; to take care of home; to overreact.
III Translate into English:
1.Нам слід переступити межу розбіжностей між статями та створити надійні, ніжні стосунки.
2.Часом жінки реагують надто емоційно на деякі вчинки чоловіків.
3.Чоловік, що панікує в стресовій ситуації, здається не тією людиною, на яку можна покластися.
4.Відомо,що як чоловіки, так і жінки не завжди задоволені одні одними.
5.Зазвичай чоловіки потребують від своїх дружин занадто багато уваги, а інколи і ревнують їх до своїх власних дітей.
6.Чоловікам не подобається, коли жінки пліткують та дивляться серіали.
7.Жінки вважають, що чоловіки не завжди цінують їх працю по веденню домашнього господарства.
IV. Answer the questions:
1. What are the stereotypes of women’s and men’s feelings and behaviour?
2. Discuss the following problems:
- women’s complaints about men
- men’s complaints about women
3. What women/men can do to help their relationship partner feel happier?
3.2. Behavioral therapies Text 1. The Approaches to Therapy.
In the first place, and probably most important, behavioral therapies have tried to base their techniques on psychological theories of learning. Also, as is implied in their designation, the emphasis tends to be placed on behavior rather than on inferred personality constructs. From this point of view, then, the individual's "symptoms" are seen as learned behaviors, and the appropriate approach is to try to change or modify such problem behaviors directly rather than to treat them indirectly as manifestations of underlying problems.
Watson, the early champion of Behaviorism, reported the famous case of "Little Albert," in which a nine-month old boy developed a conditioned fear of animals. Previously, this child had played with animals and displayed no fear of them. But, after a number of trials where a loud noise was introduced as the child was about to touch a white rat, the child became fearful of the animal and this fear generalized to other animals. A few years later, Mary Cover Jones reported her successful attempts at removing children's fears. The basic procedure was to have the child engaged in some pleasurable activity, such as eating, and then to introduce the feared object at some distance from the child. Gradually the feared object was brought closer and closer to the child, who eventually reacted to it without fear.
The response to these early experiments in the modification of behavior was limited, even though there were isolated reports of application of comparable procedures and principles. The rising popularity of psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic psychotherapy may have also acted as a counterforce to learning theory approaches to therapy. Whatever the explanation, behavioral therapies developed very slowly, even though there were several papers that pointed out the relationship between learning theory and psychotherapy, and Dollard and Miller attempted to reformulate psychoanalytic concepts into learning terminology.
It should be kept in mind, however, that the behavioral and learning oriented procedures are still in a developing stage and that a large amount of research, practice, and theoretical discussion is currently taking place.
The attempts at treatment deal more directly with the modification of observable behaviors and generally the therapeutic relationship, interpretation, and similar phenomena which are emphasized in analytically oriented and other comparable forms of traditional psychotherapy receive little or no emphasis. Finally, behavior therapists are more interested in research and in relating their work to other areas of scientific psychology than in the other therapeutic orientations and discussing the results of their therapeutic interventions.