Psychology 2023 AS
Psychology 2023 AS
Psychology 2023 AS
1.
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(Total 3 marks)
A teacher asked her class for a volunteer to talk to future A-level students. The teacher asked
2. Sarah first, but she refused. The teacher then asked Emily to help.
Use your knowledge of resistance to social influence to explain Emily’s likely response to the
teacher’s request.
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(Total 3 marks)
She conducted interviews individually with 10 students. One of the questions in the interview
was, ‘How many times have you been ‘told off’ for not following the school’s uniform rules this
term?’ The results from this question are shown in the table below.
Number of times each student had been ‘told off’ that term
Number of times
Student
‘told off’
1 1
2 7
3 2
4 3
5 4
6 5
7 3
8 1
9 25
10 2
Explain why the median would be a more appropriate measure of central tendency than the
mean for the data in the table above.
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(Total 2 marks)
She conducted interviews individually with 10 students. One of the questions in the interview
was, ‘How many times have you been ‘told off’ for not following the school’s uniform rules this
term?’ The results from this question are shown in the table below.
Number of times each student had been ‘told off’ that term
Number of times
Student
‘told off’
1 1
2 7
3 2
4 3
5 4
6 5
7 3
8 1
9 25
10 2
Explain how the sample of 10 participants could have been obtained from the students at the
school using stratified sampling.
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(Total 4 marks)
Explain how Maya might show either commitment or flexibility to persuade the workers to
change their behaviour.
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(Total 2 marks)
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(Total 3 marks)
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(Total 3 marks)
(Total 1 mark)
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(Total 4 marks)
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(Total 4 marks)
Rivers Academy West London Page 5 of 21
Kaleb is learning about models of memory. Last week the teacher taught the class about the
11. multi-store model. This week she is teaching the working memory model. Kaleb is now finding it
difficult to recall any of the information about the multi-store model of memory.
Using your knowledge of interference as an explanation for forgetting, explain Kaleb’s difficulty.
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(Total 3 marks)
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(Total 4 marks)
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(Total 8 marks)
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(Total 4 marks)
In the 1990s, many children were found living in poor-quality orphanages in Romania. Cema and
15. her sister Katti lived in one of these orphanages from birth but were later adopted. When they
were adopted, Cema was 5 months old and Katti was 5 years old. Their development was then
studied for several years.
Using your knowledge of the Romanian orphan studies, explain how Katti’s development is likely
to have differed from Cema’s as they grew older.
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(Total 6 marks)
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(Total 2 marks)
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(Total 12 marks)
Possible content:
• going along with the majority through acceptance of new information
• occurs because of a desire to be right/correct
• occurs in ambiguous/difficult/novel situations
• conforming for cognitive reasons
• leads to internalisation
• a permanent change in view/behaviour.
Credit other relevant content including the use of examples to illustrate informational social
influence.
[3]
[AO2 = 3]
2.
3 marks for a clear, coherent and detailed explanation with explicit links to the scenario, using
appropriate terminology.
2 marks for a less detailed explanation where application might be implicit.
1 mark for a muddled or limited explanation.
For full marks the answer must refer to Emily being more likely to refuse/resist the teacher OR
Sarah.
[AO2 = 2]
3.
1 mark for each of the following:
• there is a large anomalous result in the data set/ student 9 has been told off 25 times
• the median is not affected by this/this would distort the mean value.
Accept answers based on the level of data (not interval/mean not appropriate).
[2]
[AO2 = 2]
5.
2 marks for a clear and coherent explanation of how Maya might show either commitment or
flexibility to persuade the workers in her office to change their behaviour.
1 mark for a muddled/limited explanation.
Possible content:
• commitment: Maya might place herself at some inconvenience – she may volunteer to buy
some reusable cups. This will draw more attention to her ‘cause’ (augmentation principle)
• flexibility: Maya might adapt her view/accepting other valid counterarguments. She could
agree that some paper cups could still be available in case anyone forgot to bring their
reusable cup to work.
If both factors are applied, mark both and credit the best answer.
[2]
[AO1 = 3]
6.
1 mark each for a brief outline of a correct finding that identifies an appropriate finding with a
correct percentage or direction of influence.
Credit an answer which may focus on explanations for behaviour eg some participants reported
‘distortions of perception’/ ‘distortions of judgement’.
[AO3 = 3]
7.
3 marks for a clear, coherent and detailed explanation of an appropriate limitation of Asch’s
research into conformity, using appropriate terminology.
2 marks for a less detailed explanation of an appropriate limitation using some of the detail given
below.
1 mark for a muddled or limited explanation.
Possible limitations:
• lacks temporal validity: Asch’s findings may not be so relevant today – the outcome may
have been influenced by social attitudes of the 1950s – post-war attitudes that people
should work together and consent rather than dissent
• lacks mundane realism: Asch’s task was artificial – therefore not a valid measure of real-life
conformity where conforming takes place in a social context and often with people we know
rather than strangers.
• lacks ecological validity: the research was carried out in a laboratory/controlled conditions,
so behaviour may not represent real world conformity
• demand characteristics: artificiality of situation/task may have caused some participants to
go along with the confederates, reducing internal validity
• gender bias/lack of generalisability: use of a male sample thus may not represent female
behaviour.
• lacks population validity: use of volunteer sample whose behaviour may not represent that
of a wider population
• ethical problems including deception (participants believed they were taking part in a test of
perception) and protection from harm (participants were put in a stressful and
embarrassing situation).
[AO3 = 4]
9.
For each criticism award marks as follows:
2 marks for a clear and coherent outline of an appropriate criticism of studies into short-term
memory.
1 mark for a muddled/limited outline.
Possible criticisms:
• lack of mundane realism: use of artificial material (eg recall of trigrams, lists of
unconnected words etc)
• early research often lacked adequate control, introducing confounding variables into the
study, reducing validity
• inconsistent findings: span for letters is lower than span for digits
• overestimation of capacity: capacity is only 4 chunks not 7+/- 2 items
• lack of ecological validity: studies carried out in an artificial laboratory setting or with
artificial tasks, do not reflect real life memory
• alternative explanations in relation to specific studies, eg Peterson and Peterson’s findings
may be more to do with interference than duration
• issues with participant variables in studies that used independent measures design (eg
Baddeley’s study of coding)
• issues with order effects in studies that used repeated measures designs (eg Jacobs).
Relevant studies would include: Baddeley, Jacobs, Miller, Peterson and Peterson. Studies of
working memory could be made relevant.
[4]
[AO1 = 4]
10.
Level Marks Description
0 No relevant content.
There may be a depth/breadth trade-off: one effect in detail or more than one effect in less detail.
[4]
[AO2 = 3]
11.
3 marks for a clear, coherent and detailed explanation of why Kaleb is having difficulty recalling
the multi-store model.
2 marks for a less detailed explanation using some of the detail given below.
1 mark for a muddled or limited explanation.
Possible content:
• retroactive interference is occurring
• the newer learning of the working memory model (WMM) is affecting recall of the older
information about the multi-store model (MSM)
• information about the WMM may have overwritten the earlier information about the MSM
• interference is more likely to occur because both topics were similar/models of memory
• there may not have been much time between learning the two models and so they have
become confused/forgetting of the first model (MSM) is greater.
[AO3 = 4]
12.
Level Marks Description
0 No relevant content.
[AO1 = 4 AO3 = 4]
13.
Level Marks Description
0 No relevant content.
Only credit evaluation of the methodology used in studies when made relevant to the model.
[8]
[AO1 = 4]
14.
Level Marks Description
0 No relevant content.
[AO2 = 6]
15.
Level Marks Description
0 No relevant content.
Credit content that reverses the order, eg Cema is more likely to have a secure attachment.
Credit other relevant content.
[6]
[AO1 = 2]
16.
2 marks for a clear and coherent explanation of an implication of the findings of research into the
role of the father.
1 mark for a muddled/limited explanation.
Possible content:
• increasingly fathers remain at home and therefore contribute less to the economy
consequently more mothers may return to work and contribute more to the economy
• changing laws on paternity leave/shared parental leave – government-funded so affects
the economy; impact upon employers
• gender pay gap may be reduced if parental roles are regarded as more equal
• early attachment research, eg Bowlby suggests fathers should provide an economic rather
than an emotional function.
Answers that focus on the economic costs of doing research into the role of the father are not
creditable.
[2]
0 No relevant content.
Possible content:
• idea of ‘cupboard love’ – children learn to become attached to their caregiver because they
give them food
• secondary drive/drive reduction in relation to feeding and attachment
• learning can be due to associations (classical conditioning) – outline of how this process
works in attachment: association of caregiver (NS) with food (UCS) causes conditioned
response of pleasure
• learning can be due to patterns of positive/negative reinforcement (operant conditioning) –
outline of how this process works in attachment, eg being fed when they cry – crying is
positively reinforced by the caregiver; caregiver receives negative reinforcement when
crying stops.