Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Some Research

Article One:
More of an example of what ethics are involved with psychology; this article pertains to what was behind the Stanford Prison Experiment.  That being both sides of the methodology and situationist views.

Griggs, Richard and George Whitehead. "Coverage of the Stanford Prison Experiment in
Introductory Social Psychology Textbooks." Teaching of Psychology 41.4 (2014): 318-324. Teaching of Psychology. Web. 28 Oct. 2014.

Article Two:
This article provides a stronger base for how some step-wise decisions lack the sensitivity that some cases need.  In this process it refers to different variables, values, and factors found in the selected cases.

Lasser, Jon, Laurie McGarry Klose, and Rachel Robillard. "Context-sensitive ethics in school psychology." Contemporary School Psychology 17 (2013): 119+. Health Reference Center Academic. Web. 28 Oct. 2014.

Article Three:
The final article focuses on different commentators to the Milgram experiments and what ethical issues are brought forward.  As it reaches beyond these experiments, it touches base on what different regions and boards set as ethical rules.

McArthur, D. "Good ethics can sometimes mean better science: research ethics and the Milgram experiments." Science And Engineering Ethics 15 (2009): 69-79. MEDLINE Complete. Web. 29 Oct. 2014.

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