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ZIMBARDO LONDON 2016
Emmanuel Centre, Marsham Street SW1P 3DW
The same programme will be repeated on four dates:
Monday 21 March * Tuesday 22 March
Wednesday 23 March * Thursday 24 March
10.30 am – 4 pm
Professor Christina Maslach, Professor of Psychology and President of the Faculty Senate at the University of California at Berkeley The Reluctant Heroine who Terminated the SPE and how this led to research on burnout
Dr Philip Zimbardo is a Professor Emeritus at Stanford University. He has been described as ‘a legendary teacher’, someone with a gift of enthralling his audience and packing a powerful message.
MY JOURNEY FROM CREATING EVIL TO INSPIRING HEROISM Dr. Zimbardo will share his views on the nature of evil, revisit the Milgram Obedience studies, his Stanford Prison Experiment, take us to the torture dungeon at Iraq's Abu Ghraib, and describe why it is essential to understand not only individual temperament, but also situational forces, and powerful system influences that create, justify and maintain, evil-‐generating situations. Finally, we go from examining how ordinary people do very bad things to how other ordinary people do very good things that qualify as Heroic. We uncover a new perspective on Ordinary Heroes, and why we need to encourage everyone to become Heroes-‐In-‐Waiting ready to act on behalf of others or a moral cause when the situation arises. Finally, Zimbardo invites us all of us to become HIPSTERS—part of his new Heroic Imagination Project.
Dr Mark Griffiths is Director of the International Gaming Research Unit at Nottingham Trent University (UK). He has published over 1500 papers and articles on behavioural addictions, and has 14 awards for his research. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF BEHAVIOURAL ADDICTION For many people the concept of addiction involves taking of drugs. However, there is a growing movement that views a number of behaviours as potentially addictive including gambling, sex, exercise, videogame playing and Internet use. In this talk Dr Griffiths will argue that all addictions consist of a number of distinct common components. Addictions are a part of a biopsychosocial process and evidence is growing that excessive behaviours of all types do seem to have many commonalities.
Phil Banyard Reader in Psychology, Nottingham Trent University, former Chief Examiner OCR. WHO AM I? It is perhaps the biggest question for all of us. Who am I and how did I come to be like this? Am I just a pile of genes, or am I a biological computer or have I been created by my life experiences? This talk will look at some of the approaches that psychologists take to try and answer this question.
Cara Flanagan, Widely published author of A level Psychology books. VALIDITY AND ECOLOGICAL VALIDITY Students love it, examiners loathe it -‐ the ecological validity criticism. In this talk Cara will explore the intricacies of the concept of validity, and a bit of reliability too.
Tickets
£25 (inc VAT) per student
1 free ticket for every 10 students.
BOOKING Send the following details by email or post • Date of conference (select March 21,
22, 23 or 24) • Your name, school’s name and full
postal address, and contact telephone number
• Number of tickets required for students and for teachers
[email protected] POST
Southwest Conferences, East Gilgo, Migdale, Bonar Bridge, Sutherland IV24 3AR PHONE
01863 766242 / 07710 534418 Note that no deposits will be taken. Payment in full required by Feb 1, 2016 No refunds will be given. Full event details sent with tickets.