Alzheimer’s Disease and Memory

General Psychology Paper:
Psychological Science in Everyday Life Overview: One of psychology’s claims to fame is that psychological information can be applied to better understand and help people’s everyday lives. For this paper, you will have the opportunity to explore a topic in psychology that has such implications, research it in more detail, and consider how this information can be applied.
Instructions:
(1) Please choose one topic from the list below. Each topic is based on material discussed in the respective modules.
(2) Research your topic. Start by reading the module content and note any references in the module. Then, find websites, articles, and/or books on your topic. Your research must include at least two journal articles or books. That is, websites can be very helpful and informative, but your final paper must include full articles (whether from the Internet or elsewhere) or books on the topic. Sources should be reputable and consistent with what you learned in the module as well as other sources. GoogleScholar and PDF articles from the Internet can be helpful resources. This paper requirement means that you need to include at least two primary sources in your paper; articles from the Internet can be included, but they would be in addition to the two minimum primary sources. Primary sources are firsthand accounts; thus, they involve the author writing about his or her own work. Primary sources include books or published journal articles.
Grading information:
Each paper is worth 100 points. The paper may be completed any time before the Final Exam. The grading turnaround for papers is one week (that is, you should expect to have a submitted paper graded by one week from the date of submission).
The point distribution for the papers is as follows:
20 points: Writing. Criteria: appropriate grammar, appropriately edited for syntax and phrasing, complete sentences, structured in paragraph and essay form, meets page length requirements.
20 points: Follows the prompt: all portions of the paper are complete. Answers fully address the questions in the prompt and address them in a sufficiently detailed way.
20 points: Evidence. In each paper, you are required to support evidence for your written points, whether the evidence is specific detail from the modules, the Internet, or your observations (and, in all cases, the evidence needs to be stated in your own words and not plagiarized). These sources should be appropriately cited. For example: (Scott, 2010) or (www.sciencedaily.com, “What is Keeping Your Kids Up At Night,” para. 2). Sufficient referencing and integration (without plagiarism) of other sources is necessary to achieve full points in this area. A reference page is also needed. At least the minimum number of primary sources (see above) is also needed.
20 points: Evaluation. In each paper, you are to include your own thoughts and evaluations. Each paper option involves you thinking further on a topic in psychology and making some evaluations and decisions about the topic. Your thoughts need to be described in sufficient detail and identified as your thoughts, compared to information that you may obtain elsewhere. Sufficient explanation is necessary to achieve full points in this area.
20: Content. Accuracy of your written positions and appropriateness of content given the question prompts are necessary to achieve full points in this area. This is the heart of the papers—answering the questions correctly, accurately, and appropriately. In the cases of providing your opinions, these should still be grounded correctly in the theory or module topic that you are addressing.
Instructions:
(1) Please choose one topic from the list below. Each topic is based on material discussed in the respective modules.
(2) Research your topic. Start by reading the module content and note any references in the module. Then, find websites, articles, and/or books on your topic. Your research must include at least two articles or books. That is, websites can be very helpful and informative, but your final paper must include full articles (whether from the Internet or elsewhere) or books on the topic. Sources should be reputable and consistent with what you learned in the module as well as other sources. GoogleScholar and PDF articles from the Internet can be helpful resources.
Tips for finding sources:
(a) A Google search can be a helpful way to start. You can then see the scope and type of information available. After you’ve read up on the topic, you can then search more academic sources such as through GoogleScholar or academic websites (such as hospitals and research institutions) that might have articles and reports available.
(b) Each topic on the list does have information that you can find online as well as in print. If, for whatever reason, you have trouble locating this information, you may want to switch topics.
(c) Make sure you use good search terms when trying to find articles. You may want to start broad (for example, “bystander effect”) and then narrow to your particular area.
(3) Each topic has an application component. Some suggestions for application can be researched, but you will also need to come up with your own ideas. You may want to jot down notes as you research your topic so that you can come to your own conclusions.
(4) Write the paper. Be sure to include all components from the questions above for your topic. The paper should be written in essay format (not an outline), in 12-point font, and double-spaced. Be sure to edit carefully before submitting the paper.
Here is the format for writing the paper:
Format:
I. Introduction. Introduce your topic and explain why this topic was of interest to you.
II. Body of paper. Fully address your topic and all the components of it. Support your points with your cited research. The topic should be explained in full. This section should be at least three pages long.
III. Application. Discuss your topic’s application component. Be sure to mention what applications are recommended by others and what you recommend. You must include your own views about what the application should be, and clearly state them and why. This section should be at least one to two pages
IV. Conclusion. Conclude your topic with a wrap-up paragraph. Some suggestions for a good conclusion:
a) end by summarizing what was learned about this topic;
b) end by emphasizing a particular application of the information;
c) end by suggesting where future research and discussion should go on this topic. Total paper length: Approximately five pages PAPER TOPIC Alzheimer’s disease and memory – Which types of memory—such as episodic, procedural, etc.—are most affected by this disease? What is the progression? What are current recommendations for how to maintain functioning prior to and after diagnosis?

Educational Psychology

How important is parent/guardian involvement in student learning and achievement? Developing
partnerships and collaboration with parents/guardians can be essential to help promote
academic achievement in children. Yet, this task can be challenging for teachers. How much
parent/guardian involvement is enough and how much involvement is too much? At what point
does parent/guardian involvement become a problem? Managing this balance is a skill that can
be supported and informed by educational psychology.
For this Discussion, consider the myriad ways parents/guardians can be involved in a child’s education and how parents/guardians can help promote achievement. Consider strategies that
might be useful to encourage appropriate parent/guardian involvement and collaboration.
With these thoughts in mind:
Post by Day 5 your position on whether parent/guardian involvement in a child’s education is
beneficial and explain why. Include positive and negative aspects of parent/guardian involvement
related to student achievement. Then describe a strategy that might encourage parent/guardian
involvement and collaboration. Justify your response with references to this week’s Readings.
Readings
Article: Brophy, J. (1998). Classroom management as socializing students into clearly articulated
roles. Journal of Classroom Interaction, 33(1), 41–45.
Retrieved from the Walden Library using the Education Research Complete database.
Article: Center for Mental Health in Schools at UCLA. (2011). Implementing response to
interventions in context. Retrieved from http://smhp.psych.ucla.edu/pdfdocs/implementingrti.pdf
Article: Ducharme, J. M., & Shecter, C. (2011). Bridging the gap between clinical and classroom
intervention: Keystone approaches for students with challenging behavior. School Psychology
Review, 40(2), 257–274.
Retrieved from the Walden Library using the Education Research Complete database.
Article: Marks, D. B. (2010). Preservice teachers’ perceptions of classroom management
instruction: Theory to practice. National Teacher Education Journal, 3(2), 179–201.
Retrieved from the Walden Library using the Education Research Complete database.
Article: Marzano, R. J., & Marzano, J. S. (2003). The key to classroom management. Educational
Leadership, 61(1), 6–13.
Retrieved from the Walden Library using the Educational Research Complete database.
Article: Rosas, C., & West, M. (2009). Teachers beliefs about classroom management: Preservice and inservice teachers’ beliefs about classroom management. International Journal of
Applied Educational Studies, 5(1), 54–61.
Retrieved from the Walden Library using the Education Research Complete database.

Course Reflection (Cognitive Processes)

Throughout the course, you have been exposed to theories in cognitive psychology and have
been asked to use those theories to solve problems and evaluate human cognition.
Based on what you have learned, discuss the role you think cognitive psychology plays in understanding
human behavior and interactions.
How has this field advanced our understanding of human cognition and behavior?
How has cognitive psychology helped us to create socially responsible strategies for improving cognition?
What directions do you think the field will take next, and how will that research be important in solving contemporary problems or real-world issues?

Targeted Topics in Applied Behavior Analysis

Setting the Scene: 
You are a Board Certified Assistant Behavior Analyst (BCaBA) who works for Applied Behavior
Associates, a community mental health agency. A group home provider serving adolescent foster
children, ages 13–17, has submitted a referral to your agency for staff training in “behavior
control procedures.” You have been assigned to provide training in basic principles of positive
behavior intervention for the home. The home previously contracted with a non-credentialed
“behavior specialist” who wrote behavior guidelines for the staff to follow. These guidelines
included such recommendations as, “Whenever you notice a resident becoming aggressive, tell
him to go to the quiet area. If he refuses, implement the two-person transportation procedure to
move him to the quiet area. Prevent the resident from leaving the quiet area until he is calm.
After the resident has met criteria to leave the quiet area, remove all privileges for the rest of the
day.” These procedures have failed miserably, and you are being asked to provide some
guidance.
Discussion:
Discuss the three-term contingency (antecedent, behavior, and consequence) and its relevance
to understanding why behaviors occur. What information pertaining to the three-term contingency
needs to be considered in the current scenario?
Discuss the components necessary for an operational definition of a target behavior. Provide an
operational definition of the target behavior labeled “aggression” in the scenario that could be
used to provide more clarity.
Discuss one of the seven dimensions of Applied Behavior Analysis outlined by Baer, Wolf, and
Risley (found in Applied Behavior Analysis, Chapter 1, and beginning on page 16) and describe
how the dimension can be applied when considering interventions in the current scenario.

Alfred Adler and Contributions in the Field of Psychology

Alfred Adler and Contributions in the Field of Psychology
Instructions 
Write a biographical sketch on Alfred Adler and his contributions to the field of psychology. Use at least five different references (8-10 pages).

Research Proposal In Psychology Topic

One of the topics is Motivation, Domestic abuse, Depression, etc
Writing a Scientific Research Proposal. Final Proposal due on or before 5/12
Please scroll down for Final Template
A research proposal has three main points:
1) Explanation of proposed research (what will be done)
2) Methods and techniques to be employed (how it will be done)
3) Novelty and/or importance of the study (why it should be done)

  1. Title

This should provide a specific summary of the proposed work

  1. II) Abstract (PART II)

 One paragraph that allowing the quick and accurate assessment of the basic premise of the proposal in 250 words or less.
III. Introduction and Literature Review
Your first sentence of the introduction should identify the research problem. This
sentence or two should address why the research is important and what you are hoping
to accomplish. What is the problem under investigation?
Next, you should complete a literature review. Your review of the literature should only
include the 5 articles you select. The more recent the better. Through the use of previous research, you should develop the general background of the research problem and identify research holes to show how your experiment can further research in the field. Make sure you
include your hypothesis in this section, as well as, the independent and dependent
variables.
Lastly, identify your research design. You should begin with the basics of your research topic and then narrow the focus of those details that are especially pertinent to the proposed work. Present what is currently known in the field in terms of motivation and how these discoveries were made. This is the place to show what is interesting and cutting-edge in the field that led to your research idea. You are laying the groundwork for your proposal with the material that you present.

  1. Method

In this section you should discuss how you are going to meet the goals discussed in the
introduction. This portion of the proposal is broken down further into questions you
should answer within each subsection.
Research Hypothesis
What is the hypothesis that you are testing? What are the questions that you seek to answer? Based on what is known in this field, explain what you expect to see and hope to show through your result? This is where you share your thoughts.
Dependent Variable:
*What behavior are you going to measure?
*How often are you going to measure the behavior?
*What is the type of observation?
*What is the recording method? How will data be recorded?
Independent Variable/Subject Variable:
*What are you going to manipulate?
*Describe (in detail) the levels of the independent variable.
*What variables are controlled?
*How are they presented?
*How long will they be presented?
*What instructions will the participant receive?
*Who will give the instructions?
*Who will be present when the behavior is measured?
Material
Describe your proposed experiment in depth. What processes are you going to use? What kind of equipment and supplies will be necessary for the project? What will you use for a control, and what will be your replicate? Be thorough, but not excessive. It might be useful to construct an outline before completing this section, as this will give you an idea of what should be occurring when, and if your goals are attainable in the given time.
Participants
*Who are your participants going to be? (i.e., What is the gender, age education, race,
etc. of your participants?)
*How many participants are you going to have?
*How are you going to recruit them?
*How are you going to assign them to groups?
*How are you going to compensate them?
*What criteria will you use for participation in your project?
Apparatus/Materials
*What apparatus are you going to use?
*What materials are you going to use?
*Are you going to administer any psychological tests? If so, which ones?
*Are there any special supplies you require?
*Do you need an apparatus or device to observe or record behavior?
Procedure
*What is your research design?
*What will happen in your experiment?
*Where is your study going to take place? (Describe where the data will be collected)
Your sentence structure should look something like this:
“According to Thullen et al. (1999), nitrate removal rates were highest in those wetlands that contained a divers number of plants species.”
“Within organisms cellular nitrogen generally exists as either ammonia-nitrogen or amino-nitrogen, which are the most reduced forms of nitrogen (Delwiche, 1981).”
Never leave your reader in doubt as to the source of your information. Cite thoroughly and cite properly. You only have 5 sources to pull from, so make sure they’re inter-related and usable.
 

  1. Conclusion and Justification (PART II)

Your literature review will have already helped to lead the reader to an understanding of why your topic is of importance. This is where you will explicitly state how your proposed research will advance knowledge. What are the far-reaching effects? Will your study potentially change practices or policies? Why is it that your research deserves funding? Why should we care about your study? Convince the reader why this study belongs in the scholarly literature.
 

  1. Reference

Include the 5 resources that were used in the writing of the paper. Follow APA guidelines for formatting.
VII. Presentation (PART II)
APA style followed throughout (look it up) and clear evidence of proofreading
VIII. Submission (PART II)
Be sure it’s turned in by or before 5/12
 
***A note on Voice:
There is no one format for voice in scientific writing. Active voice is usually encouraged (use of “I” or “We”), but in practice many writers switch between active and passive voice to keep the writing from becoming too repetitive.
Important Points to Remember
-An organized, well-written, concise, complete proposal = an easier to conduct experiment
-A good proposal is like a good sales pitch. In the world of graduate studies and scientific
research a proposal is the means by which funding is secured.
-Good writing when paired with a thorough understanding of the subject matter is a valuable skill to possess.

Personality Disorders Assignment

InsStudents will present through PowerPoint a case study treatment plan for working with the
selected vulnerable population. Students will use work from previous units in the course
(SOAPIER, Sample Intake Interview, Outline and Resources). Students will also present
community and national resources for the selected population as well as goals, projected
outcomes, and methods for follow-up with the client group. An audio version of the presentation
should be included with the PowerPoint presentation. The PowerPoint should be a minimum of
10 slides of content and also include additional slides with references in APA format.
Assignment Requirements
Length: minimum 10 slides
APA Format
Submitting Your Assignment
Please complete the assignment as a Word document.
Click the +Submit Assignment link located in the right-hand column of the course window.
Click the Choose File button.
Navigate to your document and select it.
Click the Submit Assignment button.
instructions
The purpose of this assignment is to give you an opportunity to apply the personality theories
reviewed in this course to a real person.
Begin by choosing a famous person to study and analyze.
The famous person may be alive or dead.
The main requirements for your choice include the famous person must be well known, and there
must be sufficient information available about this person’s life to adequately complete the
assignment.
After choosing a famous person, gather information about his or her life and personality. Your
goal is to get to know this person well so that you will have plenty of information upon which to
base the personality analysis.
Apply two personality theories covered in class to your chosen person. For example, you may
choose to analyze this person from a psychoanalytic perspective.
What do you know about his/her childhood that would be of interest to a psychoanalyst?
Does this person seem to be fixated at any stage?
What conclusions can you draw?
The analysis must be substantiated by the facts of the individual’s life and the theory used.
Use some of the assessments to help with this analysis.
Think about how this person might respond to the personality test questions.
Might the person be diagnosed with a personality disorder?
Provide a brief biography of the individual. This is not a review of the person’s life, but an
analysis of the person’s personality.
Choose a famous person where you might obtain enough information on that person to write a
personality assessment.
Write an 800 to 900-word paper following APA format.
Paper Requirements
Length: 800 – 900 words
Double Spaced, 12 point font, 1 inch Margin
APA Format
Please add notes so i can do the audio portion

Child Maltreatment

This journal assignment requires you to go back to re-read part of REVEL Chapter 10 on
Emotional and Social Development in Early Childhood, specifically the section on Child
Maltreatment towards the end of the chapter. After re-reading this section, you should be able to
identify the different factors that increase rates of childhood abuse and neglect.
Respond by answering these questions:
* What does the term maltreatment mean?
* What is the most commonly reported type of child maltreatment, according to your textbook?
* Identify some of the most common maltreatment risk factors (things that increase the possibility
of being abused or neglected). List at least 4 of them.
* In your own opinion, is spanking the same thing as abuse? Were you spanked as a child? Do
you believe it was good or bad for you? Why or why not?
References
Berk, L., & Meyers, A. (2016). Infants and children: Prenatal through middle childhood. Pearson
Edition.

Child’s Fine and Gross Motor Skills Development

Structure of Essay
Please include an introduction to the essay and a conclusion at the end. These give the reader
an opportunity to prepare for the content, and to help gather up your thoughts at the end.
Using Quotes
Because this essay is open-book, it is natural for you to want to refer to the textbook, cite the
author, and maybe even quote the textbook in a few areas. The bulk of the final exam essay
should be your own wording and phrasing. A maximum of one quote per paragraph may be
used, with a total maximum of 5 quotes for the essay. Read through your textbook, pause and
reflect on the topic, then summarize the main ideas in your essay using your own language.
Please use the footnotes are a valid reference/quote
References
Berk, L., & Meyers, A. (2016). Infants and children: Prenatal through middle childhood. Pearson
Edition.

Marketing of Bipolar Disorder

PART 1 (5 pgs)
-The analysis of this text: The Medicalization of ‘Ups and
Downs’: The Marketing of the New Bipolar Disorder by Joanna Moncrieff (I will upload the
document) alongside two other scholarly texts related to the subject (any). Guidelines below:
Write an essay of your own in which you critically analyze a text and its problem and
ideas/argument. Do this work in the context of two other ancillary texts: at least one scholarly
source. Your essay should show counterintuitive and complex assessment of BOTH your chosen
essay and the problem at hand, a thoughtful reflection on the specific cultural issue emerging
from your chosen essay. Your writing task is, therefore, two-fold: to sharpen and complicate our
understanding of this scholarly text and advance our understanding of this particular problem by
way of your own thinking.
Some additional advice: You will not have a single thesis; rather, you will have two robust and
well-supported critical claims. Keep in mind that your chosen essay is both a source of
inspiration as well as a kind of anchor or gravitational force: you are connected to it as a weight;
it will give your essay coherence. Your objective is to uncover and reveal parts of the essay that
are hidden, latent, obscured, assumed, invisible, underdeveloped or missing but also,
importantly, relevant and meaningful to the stakes of the essay and problem as a whole. The
central work you do in this essay will be in-between sources: translating the information you cull
from your ancillary sources into new insights about your primary essay and the issue at hand. As
always, an essay will develop and deepen your own ideas about this problem, have a thoughtful
and progressive structure, and use sources and analyzes evidence richly, thoughtfully, and
accurately.
The draft should be around 5-6 pages double-spaced: leave yourself a page for growth over
revisions. The final revision will be around 7-8 pages.
Follow formatting on the syllabus (double-spaced, pagination, etc).
Label your document with your first initial, last name, and CAD1. My document would be
NListonCAD1.docx (Word documents only).
PART 2 (1pg)
Include a cover letter before your final essay.
Cover letter. Reflect on your writing during this unit: from your exercises, to in-class free writes
and discussions, to your essay. What has been the intellectual enjoyment and struggle of critical
analysis—problematizing, finding gaps, omissions, implicit ideas, contradictions, insufficiencies,
latent parts, paradoxes—in an essay? You might consider classwork, the research process,
exercises, peer review, and/or your conference. What do you think are the most valuable part of
your essay? What still needs work and why? How have you improved as a writer (and as a
reader and thinker) during this progression?
(~1 page, single-spaced)
Please also include an Acknowledgments section after Works Cited.
Give your essay a title.
Use Times New Roman 12-point font, double-spaced, 1’ margins, page numbers (see syllabus
for further detail).
GRADING CRITERIA:
Critical Analysis Essay (30% of grade): Using at least two scholarly sources, develop an
argument that offers an assessment of the value and shortcomings of an argumentative essay
about a complex problem related to pharmaceutical treatment and illness.
Skills Practiced:
Reading and analyzing a complex written text’s rhetoric and its persuasive
strategies.
Developing a conversation among a group of texts.
Using that body of texts to generate ideas and to explore their far-reaching
implications.
Learning to substantiate and clarify an idea using those texts.
Practicing the art of reflection both to generate and strengthen ideas
Documenting written texts that are cited in an essay.
Writing a clearly organized persuasive essay that both assesses the value of a text and its
gaps, underlying assumptions, and implicit ideas