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Psychology 111

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Psychology 111 Grading and Course Conduct – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Psychology 111


1
Psychology 111
  • Grading and Course Conduct

2
Course Objectives
  • Introduction to psychological content and
    perspective
  • Familiarity with scientific methodology and
    reasoning
  • Awareness of the relationship of theory,
    research, and generalizations
  • Ethics and inclusiveness
  • Communication skills

3
Student Assessment
  • Unit Exams (60) best 3 of 4
  • Final Exam (15) take-home critical thinking
    essay
  • Writing Assignments (15)
  • Experiencing Psychology Labs and Discussions (10)

4
Letter Grade Determination
  • At mid point and course close, weighted average
    will be computed, e.g.,
  • Weighted age (.50 x exam average)
  • (.15 x final score) (.20 x Assign. avg.)
  • (.15 x lab average)
  • Weighted age then translated into letter grade
    by 90-80-70-60 criteria

5
But what does a grade mean?
  • A distinctly superior performance
  • B consistently above average performance
  • C average performance
  • D consistently below average performance
  • F failing performance
  • Grades are not a reflection of your personal
    worth, but my assessment of your performance

6
Important Class Policies
  • First Amendment-level protections of free speech
  • Question, Question, Question (Skeptical Inquiry)
  • This class first, illness, sports, debate, choir,
    music, travel, friends, family second
  • Not that these things are unimportant
  • Performance, not effort, is measured and evaluated

7
Some Intangibles for All Your Classes
  • Civility enhances learning.
  • Your enthusiasm is contagious
  • Be involved in class.
  • The "too cool for school" posture is unacceptable
    and offensive
  • When a fellow student speaks, it is not an
    opportunity to "tune out," take a break, or start
    a conversation

8
  • Dress appropriately for class.
  • Never close your books or rustle your papers to
    signal the end of class
  • Don't wait until it's "too late" to seek help
  • Come to my office hours with definite questions,
    concerns, or problems in mind
  • Never ask "Did I miss anything important in class
    the other day? Of Course You Did!
  • Regardless of what you might think, grading is
    not easy, nor do Profs take sadistic pleasure in
    it

9
What is Psychology?
  • Psychology as a Natural Science and a Social
    Science
  • As a natural science, psychology involves the
    study of the laws of nature.
  • As a social science, psychology involves the
    study of the laws of the thoughts, feelings, and
    behavior of humans and other organisms.

10
  • The Evolution of Ideas
  • Dialectic
  • Thesis
  • Antithesis
  • Synthesis

11
  • Psychological Perspectives The 1850s and Beyond
  • The Merging of Philosophy and Physiology Into
    Modern Psychology (18501900)
  • Psychologys Youth A Study in Diverging
    Perspectives
  • Structuralism, Functionalism, Pragmatism, and
    Associationism Studying Behavior, Not Mental
    States

12
  • Evolving Twentieth-Century Perspectives on
    Psychology
  • From Associationism to Behaviorism
  • BehaviorismA Search for Rigor and Reduction
  • Gestalt Psychology The Whole is Different
  • Cognitivism Returning to Mental Acts
  • Current Frontiers Biological and Evolutionary
    PsychologyThe Brain and Body Reunited (Sort Of)
  • Psychodynamic Psychology Conscious Behavior as
    the Tip of the Iceberg
  • Humanistic Psychology

13
  • Interest in psychological topics is ubiquitous
  • 1879 Establishment of 1st laboratory for
    Psychological Study in Leipzig
  • Wm. Wundt Goal was the identification of
    mental elements a periodic table of sensory
    events
  • Structuralism

14
Functionalism
  • Typically American emphasis on purposes and
    application
  • Key Question What is consciousness for?
  • Emphasis on adaptation
  • Conceptually related to Evolutionary theory
  • Wm. James
  • stream of consciousness

15
Behaviorism
  • Even more typically American in its emphasis on
    practical applications
  • Restricted psychological topics to observable
    events
  • Brought psychology away from speculative
    treatises to observing measurable events
  • John B. Watson

16
Psychoanalytic
  • Sigmund Freud
  • Emphasis on unconscious processes evidenced
    through behavior
  • Used a clinical method in which hypotheses are
    evaluated by patient behavior

17
Gestalt
  • Emphasized the unity of consciousness and
    perceptual events
  • Focused on identifying perceptual rules such as

18
Good Continuation
19
Closure
20
Proximity
21
Where are the schools now?
  • No psychologist would be an adherent to any
    particular school
  • Best seen as progenitors to current psychological
    interests
  • Psychoanalysis? Clinical Practice
  • Behaviorism?Learning
  • Gestalt, Structuralism? Sensation and Perception
  • Functionalism?Cognition
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