Title: PSY 250: WORKPLACE LEARNING AND PROFESSIONAL SKILLS
1PSY 250 WORKPLACE LEARNING AND PROFESSIONAL
SKILLS
- A closer look at the University of Plymouth
campus - Sabine Pahl
2Outline 4 sessions
- 1) identify key issues Observation methods
- Task explore UoP and observe users -gt
Presentation 1 - 2) Report your findings in Presentation 1
Discussion limitations Questionnaire /
interview methods - Task investigate user attitudes add to first
findings? - 3) Report your findings in Presentation 2 first
ideas for recommendations, more background Task
develop set of recommendations - 4) Presentation 3 recommendations in roleplay
context -
v
v
3Psychology of Sustainability
- Discussion of recommendations
- Two scenarios
- 1) Group 1 in the user forum for waste
recycling - Group rep to briefly present recommendations
first then role play / debate -
- 2) Group 2 in the senior management forum for
energy - Group rep to briefly present recommendations
first then role play / debate
4Psychology of Sustainability
- Scenarios 1 2
- Distribution of roles
- 5 minutes preparation for roles facilitator,
and for those who present recommendations - Presentation of recommendations
- questions discussion focus on which
recommendations should be implemented / adapted
and possible problems (groups are ready to add /
comment / help) - Final statement each participant summary re
recommendations by group reps - Discussion forum (perhaps not solution)
5Interdisciplinary and Disciplinary Research
- The climate problem is interdisciplinary
- Crosses natural science, social science,
engineering, public health, etc. - Contribution of psychology is strongest when
linked to other disciplines - Disciplines have complementary insights
- Psychology contributes most where other
disciplines fail to explain phenomena well - ..and has least to add when non-psychological
factors dominate - But its not easy to know which situation is
which, so interdisciplinary analysis is essential
lt Stern, 2009
6Some areas where psychology (behavioral sciences)
can contribute
- Understanding the behaviors that drive climate
change - Intervening to change those behaviors (example
quickly reducing direct household energy use) - Improving public understanding of climate,
climate change, and climate risk - Understanding public support, opposition, and
acceptance related to policy and technological
responses to climate change - Improving decision making in response to climate
change
lt Stern, 2009
7Understandings of climate and climate risk A
major cognitive problem
- Mismatch between climate phenomena and usual ways
of knowing - Past experience is misleading about the future
- Information from the senses is misleading
- Multiple hazards, some of them catastrophic
- The probability of each hazard is uncertain
- Long time horizons socioeconomic conditions will
change before hazards materialise - Possibility of totally unexpected consequences
- Local effects are especially hard to anticipate
- Use of inappropriate mental models
- Need to rely on trusted information sources
lt Stern, 2009
8Understanding the behaviors that drive climate
change
- Identifying the most important behaviors
- Government statistics are collected by fuels,
sectors (industry, transport, residential) - Behavioral analysis is by actors, actions,
purposes - Defined by actors, household energy use is BIG
In USA, 38 of total energy use (22 in home 16
in non-business travel) - Much of this is built into equipment (typically
gt1/2 the variance in home energy consumption) - But much is not (same equipment, different use)
- Both adoption and use of equipment are
behavioral, and need analysis
lt Stern, 2009
9What can behavioral science add?
- Social marketing insights seem to apply
- Use credible information sources (e.g., word of
mouth) - Use multiple communication channels
- Use interpersonal interactions
- Apply psychological principles of message design
- The most effective programs address non-financial
barriers - Attracting attention (e.g., social marketing)
- Action-specific information (on what to do and
expect) - Convenience (few hurdles for consumers to jump)
- Quality assurance (e.g., certification,
inspection) - Incentives are most effective in combination with
interventions that address other barriers
lt Stern, 2009
10How to Design Effective Interventions
- Address multiple barriers to behavioral change
(use multidisciplinary analysis) - Combine influence factors (information,
marketing, financial incentives, quality
assurance, convenience) - Tailor intervention to suit the target action
- Understand behavior from the users perspective
and do not presume motives or abilities - Recognize that behavior is often constrained by
factors beyond the individuals control (e.g.,
the practices of repair personnel, manufacturers,
wholesalers) - Monitor programs continually to be able to adjust
them as needed
lt Stern, 2009
11Psychology of Sustainability
- Guidelines for report PSY250
- Suggested Title
- Recommendations for improving sustainability on
the UoP campus Focus on - Four aspects to cover
- 1) Background general background (whats the
problem?) general environmental psychology
background - some prior theory and evidence - 2) Applied to UoP, with evidence
- a) Campus analysis
- b) observations
- c) user views
12Psychology of Sustainability
- Using the evidence to address the following
- Whats the current state of sustainability on the
UoP campus? - Summarise what your data say
- 3) Recommendations
- The recommendations should be based on 1) and 2)
and should consider these questions - Which aspects can be improved, and how? -gt
priority list - How do you think could these improvements be
implemented? By whom, when? Show some
understanding of feasibility issues / practical
application and cost - How will the public react, can you make any
predictions, e.g., based on your own research?
Same for different users? - What are the expected outcomes? Can you say
something about how the changes will lead to
these outcomes?
13Psychology of Sustainability
- 4) Critical evaluation (gaps, how good is the
evidence, what remains to be done, barriers)
Conclusion - Your report should contain tables / pictures /
lists to illustrate (some of these could be in an
Appendix). - Finally it should be 10 -12 pages, Arial Pt 12,
double spaced (see general guidelines for layout
references) - For a really good mark you need to provide
evidence of additional research (e.g., changes
implemented elsewhere, additional psychological
research)