Welcome to JB Resources on TES!
At JB Resources, our mission is to empower educators and students with top-tier educational materials specifically crafted for GCSE and A-Level Psychology. Our comprehensive collection is designed to cater to the diverse needs of the classroom, ensuring each lesson is interactive, thorough, and up-to-date. From complete topic bundles to individual lessons, we provide resources that make learning both enjoyable and effective.
Welcome to JB Resources on TES!
At JB Resources, our mission is to empower educators and students with top-tier educational materials specifically crafted for GCSE and A-Level Psychology. Our comprehensive collection is designed to cater to the diverse needs of the classroom, ensuring each lesson is interactive, thorough, and up-to-date. From complete topic bundles to individual lessons, we provide resources that make learning both enjoyable and effective.
This lesson was created using the latest AQA A-Level Specification (published June 2019) although content and activities may be useful for other specifications.
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
Bowlby’s Theory of Maternal Deprivation
Separation vs Deprivation
The Critical Period
Video: Psychology Unlocked - Critical Period of Attachment
The Effects of Maternal Deprivation
Effects on Intellectual Development
Effects on Emotional Development
Bowlby’s 44 Thieves Study (1944)
Activity: Evaluating Bowlby’s 44 Thieves Study
Evaluation worksheet
Evaluation points
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: Short answer question
Plenary: Consolidation question
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact jb_resources@outlook.com.
Reviews and feedback are always welcome.
This lesson was created using the latest AQA A-Level Specification (published June 2019) although content and activities may be useful for other specifications.
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
Video: Psychology Unlocked – Cognitive Psychology
Beck’s Cognitive Theory of Depression
Faulty Information Processing
Negative Self-Schema
The Negative Triad
Activity: The Negative Triad
Ellis’s ABC Model
Activity – Concepts: Yasmin
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: Short answer question
Evaluation worksheet
Evaluation points
Plenary: Consolidation Question
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact jb_resources@outlook.com.
Reviews and feedback are always welcome.
This fully editable lesson is designed for the AQA A-Level Specification (June 2019), focusing on Milgram’s Variation Experiments and the impact of situational variables on obedience. This lesson provides students with an in-depth understanding of how factors like proximity, location, and uniform affect obedience levels, drawing on real-world applications and critical evaluations of the research.
Key Features:
Comprehensive Lesson Slides: Explores Milgram’s situational variables, including proximity, location, and uniform, and their effects on obedience. Each variation is explained with key findings and contextual applications.
Interactive Activities: Features engaging tasks like the “Higher or Lower” activity, where students predict how obedience rates change under different conditions. A summary worksheet also reinforces the learning, prompting students to complete data tables and graphically display the findings from Milgram’s variations.
Assessment Materials: Includes exam-style questions, such as evaluating the situational variables and understanding their impact on obedience, along with model answers and evaluation worksheets to support student exam preparation.
Critical Evaluation: Students are guided to evaluate Milgram’s methodology, considering both strengths (like control and replicability) and limitations (such as ethical concerns and demand characteristics). The lesson also discusses the socially sensitive implications of situational explanations for obedience.
This resource is ideal for classroom teaching and independent study, helping students deepen their understanding of obedience and the situational factors that influence human behaviour.
This fully editable lesson is designed for the AQA A-Level Specification (June 2019), focusing on Asch’s Research (1951, 1955) and its exploration of conformity. This resource offers students a detailed understanding of Asch’s experiments, key findings, and critical evaluation, including variations in group size, unanimity, and task difficulty. Through engaging activities, exam practice, and model answers, students will deepen their grasp of social influence and its real-world applications.
Key Features:
Comprehensive Lesson Slides: Covers the methodology, findings, and conclusions of Asch’s research on conformity. Includes an in-depth look at variations in his experiments and their impact on conformity levels.
Interactive Activities: Features a “Do Now” task on types of conformity, a “Think-Pair-Share” discussion on Asch’s findings, and the “Asch by Numbers” activity, where students connect key statistics to Asch’s research.
Assessment Materials: Includes a practice exam question on the variables affecting conformity, such as group size and unanimity, with guidance on how Asch investigated these variables. Model answers and structured evaluation worksheets further reinforce understanding.
Evaluation and Critical Thinking: Students are encouraged to critically evaluate Asch’s research by examining its strengths and limitations, including sample bias, ecological validity, and the impact of changing societal norms on conformity.
This resource is ideal for both classroom teaching and independent learning, making it a valuable addition to your psychology lessons on social influence.
This fully editable lesson is designed for the AQA A-Level Specification (June 2019), focusing on Zimbardo’s Stanford Prison Experiment (1971) and its exploration of conformity to social roles. This resource provides students with an in-depth analysis of the procedures, findings, and critical evaluation of Zimbardo’s study, emphasizing ethical considerations and real-world applications.
Key Features:
Comprehensive Lesson Slides: Covers Zimbardo’s Stanford Prison Experiment, including participant recruitment, procedures, and the behaviour of both prisoners and guards. Key findings and conclusions are explored in detail.
Interactive Video Activities: Features a video question sheet to accompany a video on Zimbardo’s research, prompting students to analyze the recruitment, treatment, and behaviour of participants during the study.
Assessment Materials: Includes practice exam questions such as outlining Zimbardo’s research and discussing two limitations of the study, with model answers provided to support exam preparation.
Critical Evaluation: Students engage in evaluating the ethical issues, sample bias, and dispositional influences present in Zimbardo’s research, exploring the extent to which the study’s findings can be generalized to real-life scenarios like prison environments.
This lesson resource is well-suited for classroom instruction or independent study, providing a comprehensive approach to understanding social influence and the power of situational factors on human behaviour.
This lesson was created using the latest AQA A-Level Specification (published June 2019) although content and activities may be useful for other specifications.
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
Key assumptions from the Behaviourist Approach
Mowrer’s Two-Process Model (1960)
Activity: Classical Conditioning
Fear Acquisition via Classical Conditioning
Phobia Maintenance via Operant Conditioning
Activity: Concepts - Zelda’s Fear of Dogs
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: Application Question
Evaluation worksheet
Evaluation points
Video: How fear drove human evolution
Plenary: Consolidation question
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact jb_resources@outlook.com.
Reviews and feedback are always welcome.
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact me on jb_resources@outlook.com (responses are usually very prompt).
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
The Effects of Computer Games on Aggression
Experimental Studies
Correlational Studies
Longitudinal Studies
Meta-Analyses
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: The Effects of Computer Games on Aggression
Video: Are Violent Video Games Bad For You?
Evaluation points
Evaluation Activity: Getting Critical
Plenary: Consolidation Question
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact me on jb_resources@outlook.com (responses are usually very prompt).
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
Defining Validity
Types of Validity: Internal and External Validity
Video: What is the difference between internal and external validity?
Types of External Validity: Ecological and Temporal Validity
Assessing Validity: Face Validity and Concurrent Validity
Improving the Validity of Research: Experimental, Questionnaires, Observations and Qualitative Research
Activity: Define the Key Terms
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: Types of Validity
Plenary: Consolidation Question
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact me on jb_resources@outlook.com (responses are usually very prompt).
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
Hypothesis Testing: The Alternative and Null Hypotheses
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: Writing hypotheses, Choosing a Statistical Test
Levels of Significance and Probability
The p Value in Psychology
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: The p value in Psychology
The Critical Value
Activity: The Rule of R
Using the Table of Critical Values
Low Levels of Significance e.g. p value of 0.01
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: Reading the Table of Critical Values (with Worked Example)
Type I and Type II Errors
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: Distinguishing between Type I and Type II Errors
Plenary: Consolidation Question
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact me on jb_resources@outlook.com (responses are usually very prompt).
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
Thomas Kuhn’s Theory of Paradigms and Paradigm Shifts (1962)
Activity: Concepts - Psychology as a Science
Theory Construction and Hypothesis Testing
Video: Karl Popper, Science & Pseudoscience
Popper’s Theory of Falsifiability (1934)
Replicability
Objectivity and The Empirical Method
Exam Practice Questions with Mark Scheme: Features of Science
Plenary: Consolidation Question
This lesson was created using the latest AQA A-Level Specification (published June 2019) although content and activities may be useful for other specifications.
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
Atavistic Form: A Historic Approach to Offending
Lombroso’s Research
Atavistic Characteristics
Activity: Serial Killers and The Atavistic Form
Video: Eugenics - The movement that inspired the holocaust
Evaluation worksheet
Evaluation points
Exam practice with Mark Scheme: Evaluation Question
Model Answer
Plenary: Discussion question
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact jb_resources@outlook.com.
Reviews and feedback are always welcome.
This lesson was created using the latest AQA A-Level Specification (published June 2019) although content and activities may be useful for other specifications.
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
Video: What is Restorative Justice?
What is Restorative Justice?
Criminal Justice Vs. Restorative Justice
Changing The Emphasis
The Restorative Justice Process
Key Features of the Process
Variations of the Process
The Restorative Justice Council (RJC)
Video: A Restorative Justice Meeting (Short Version)
Evaluation worksheet
Evaluation points
Exam practice with Mark Scheme: 16 Mark Essay with Application
Model Paragraph
Activity: Write your own Paragraph
Plenary: Consolidation Question
Activity: Whole Topic Review
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact jb_resources@outlook.com.
Reviews and feedback are always welcome.
This lesson was created using the latest AQA A-Level Specification (published June 2019) although content and activities may be useful for other specifications.
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key questions
CBT-based Anger Management
Stage 1: Cognitive Preparation
Stage 2: Skill acquisition
Stage 3: Application practice
Anger Management Example
*Activity: Concepts – Does it work?
Exam practice with Mark scheme: Application Question
Evaluation worksheet
Evaluation points
Exam practice with Mark scheme: Evaluation Question
Plenary: Consolidation question
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact jb_resources@outlook.com.
Reviews and feedback are always welcome.
This lesson was created using the latest AQA A-Level Specification (published June 2019) although content and activities may be useful for other specifications.
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
Schaffer and Emerson’s Research (1964)
Method and Key Findings
Table of Findings
Video: Stages of Attachment
Activity: Video Question Prompts
Schaffer’s Four Stages of Attachment
Stage 1: The Asocial Stage
Stage 2: The Indiscriminate Stage
Stage 3: Specific Attachment
Stage 4: Multiple Attachments
Activity: Summary worksheet
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: Application question
Evaluation worksheet
Evaluation points
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: Evaluation question
Plenary: Consolidation Question
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact jb_resources@outlook.com.
Reviews and feedback are always welcome.
This lesson was created using the latest AQA A-Level Specification (published June 2019) although content and activities may be useful for other specifications.
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
Key Terminology
Holism
Reductionism
Levels of Explanation in Psychology
Biological Reductionism
Environmental Reductionism
Activity: Key Term Match
Evaluation worksheet
Evaluation points
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: 8 Mark Question
Plenary: Consolidation Question
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact jb_resources@outlook.com.
Reviews and feedback are always welcome.
This lesson was created using the latest AQA A-Level Specification (published June 2019) although content and activities may be useful for other specifications.
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key questions
Video: Defining Disorders
Diagnosis in Psychology: The DSM-V
Specific Phobias in the DSM-V
Phobia Prevalence in the UK
Trypophobia
Activity: Fear or Phobia
Video: Khan Academy - Phobias
Behavioural Characteristics of Phobias
Panic
Avoidance
Endurance
Emotional Characteristics of Phobias
Anxiety
Fear
Unreasonable Emotional Response
Cognitive Characteristics of Phobias
Selective Attention to the Phobic Stimulus
Irrational Beliefs
Cognitive Distortions
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: Application questions
Plenary: Consolidation question
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact jb_resources@outlook.com.
Reviews and feedback are always welcome.
This lesson was created using the latest AQA A-Level Specification (published June 2019) although content and activities may be useful for other specifications.
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
Video: The body’s physiological response to stress
Anxiety and Eyewitness Testimony
Does anxiety have a negative effect on recall?
Johnson & Scott’s (1976) Research
The Weapon Focus Effect (aka Tunnel Theory)
Does anxiety have a positive effect on recall?
Yuille & Cutshall’s (1986) Research
Explaining the Contradictory Findings
The Yerkes-Dodson Law
Video: The Yerkes-Dodson Law
Applying the Yerkes-Dodson Law to Anxiety
Evaluation worksheet
Evaluation points
Exam Practice: Application, Evaluation Questions with Mark Scheme
Consolidation Question
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact jb_resources@outlook.com.
Reviews and feedback are always welcome.
This lesson bundle includes TWO lessons:
Self-Report Techniques
Self-Report Design
*Please refer to individual lessons for further details of included content.
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact me on jb_resources@outlook.com (responses are usually very prompt).
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
Piaget’s Stages of Intellectual Development
Overview of Stages
The Sensorimotor Stage (0 - 2 years)
The Pro-operational Stage (2 - 7 years)
Video: Conservation Experiment Example
Conservation
Video: The Three Mountains Experiment (Egocentrism and Perspective Taking)
Egocentrism
Class Inclusion
Stage of Concrete Operations (7 - 11 years)
Stage of Formal Operations (11+)
Optional Video: Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development
Activity: Summary Table (with answers)
Exam Practice Questions with Mark Scheme: MCQs, Short answer, Application
Evaluation worksheet
Evaluation points
Exam Practice: Planning an 8 Mark Question
Plenary: Consolidation Question*
This lesson was created using the latest AQA A-Level Specification (published June 2019) although content and activities may be useful for other specifications.
Key content covered in this Lesson:
Key Questions
What is Forensic Psychology?
Video: What is Forensic Psychology?
Problems in Defining Crime
Cultural Issues
Historical Issues
Three Ways to Measure Crime
Official Statistics
Victim Surveys
Offender Surveys
Exam Practice with Mark Scheme: Application Question
Evaluation worksheet
Evaluation points
A Multidisciplinary Approach
Exam Practice with Mark scheme: 8 Mark Question
Plenary: Consolidation Question
To request lessons, provide feedback or if you have had any issues opening any resources of my resources, please feel free to contact jb_resources@outlook.com.
Reviews and feedback are always welcome.