YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Psychological Research Issues
Essays 1231 - 1260
In a paper consisting of ten pages the impact of parental alcohol abuse upon adolescent children's behavior and effects upon their...
In eight pages psychological and sociological views are used in an argument against legalizing marijuana due to the significant im...
In eight pages a brief essay format and assemblage of notes consider adolescents and problems of drugs and addiction with a consid...
In seventeen pages this paper examined how to teach reading to at risk students in a consideration of how reading instruction can ...
1997). In the United States alone over one million children experience parental divorce each year (Amato, Loomis and Booth, 1995)...
extent challenged when her cousin decided to get married. Up until that point, Ludmilla had created and lived a life where at leas...
Morris and Davies (1996) note a fact of working life of which we are all too well aware, that is that who we are frequently is dir...
with witnessing the violent death of Idgies brother, Buddy, serve to further connect them. They become, in essence, two halves of...
which are controlled, in general, by their general orientation toward the field of psychology. Psychoanalytic perspective The te...
notes that another five percent are victims of occasional despondency, with one of every six people succumbing to a "serious, or m...
In eight pages this paper discusses correctional programs as they pertain to women who are incarcerated with a psychological prof...
In eight pages this paper examines several case studies on stalking from psychological and sociological perspectives. Seven sou...
The writer discusses the crime of neonaticide (killing of infants) with specific reference to the case of Amy Grossberg and Brian ...
This paper contains six pages and discusses criminal psychological profiling by evaluating 3 articles on the subject. Three sourc...
In eight pages the legal system is discussed in an overview of how the insanity defense is used from a psychological point of view...
This was further supported by research conducted by the American Academy of Pediatrics, which concluded that, "Heavy exposure to t...
important because it changes who has access to test information (Smith, 2003). Prior to these revisions, only those qualified to ...
to come into play is when someone is known to be keeping a secret about something. This elevates the status of the holder of the s...
of sex crimes, however. Sexual violence often targets children as well (Nester, 1998). The issues surrounding child abuse alone ...
It is always simpler to diagnose someone elses life than ones own, and so it is that the reader watches as Goldmund slowly unravel...
The student might surmise the technique most applicable to all populations as being the concept of behavioral therapy, which takes...
timed in regards to their responses, Rosch reported that "response times are strikingly close to ratings of typicality" which mean...
generally assumes an overall demeanor or front which it upholds. Usually, one person exemplifies the idealized goal. This goal is ...
startling. It is a wake up call for anyone living in disillusionment. How many people go about their business and do not examine t...
still believe that they are not adequate (ANRED, 2003). Interpersonal Factors: Personal relationships with family and others ca...
as devoted as Ms. Emily thinks, goes out with another woman. When he returns, Emily poisons him with arsenic. Finally, she closes ...
intricacies of fetal alcohol syndrome and its manifestations, middle childhood will be explored. II. Middle Childhood There is ...
function. Paralysis or loss of vision are common in severe cases, and it currently is not possible to predict what individuals wi...
to demonstrate that negative exposure at an early age can determine the onset of phobias. Watson developed along this Behaviorist...
often prevalent in adolescent populations (APA, 1994). It must be noted that secondary oppositionalism is common and an accepted ...