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Introduction to applied psychology

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... health psychology; counselling and psychotherapy (e.g. schizophrenia treatments) ... Sports (coaching for performance); Psychotherapy and counselling (but further ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to applied psychology


1
Introduction to applied psychology
  • Introduction to the module
  • What is applied psychology?
  • A brief early history of applied psychology
  • The relationship between applied psychology and
    academic psychology
  • Areas of applied psychology
  • Career opportunities in applied psychology

2
Introduction to the module
  • For SS1 and PS1 otherwise masochists only!
  • Provides a background to applied psychology
  • This lecture and lectures by Kate Garland are
    examined
  • See details at http//www.le.ac.uk/pc/acn5/ps1009.
    html
  • Other lectures are not examined
  • Show what it is like to actually work in the
    field
  • Aim to provide a sense of how psychology has
    been and can be used

3
What is applied psychology?
  • The application of psychological knowledge,
    principles, and techniques in areas of everyday
    life
  • Contrasts to academic research no matter how
    simple or basic
  • In the former, understanding is the end why and
    how do effects occur?
  • Applied psychology focuses on practical goals
    (i.e. doing and outcomes rather than knowing)
  • Applied psychology does draw on academic
    psychology
  • Major domains of applied psychology
  • Clinical, counselling, educational, forensic,
    health, and occupational, plus others

4
Brief history of applied psychology
  • Applied psychology traditionally concerned with
    psychology in business and industry
  • Journal of Applied Psychology (founded 1917)
    still mostly covers this (rather than e.g.
    clinical or forensic)
  • Early textbooks
  • Psychology and Industrial Efficiency
    (Munsterberg, 1913) and Psychology of Advertising
    (Scott, 1908) covered personnel selection,
    efficiency of work, and advertising
  • First university appointment in 1915
  • Walter Dill Scott appointed Professor of Applied
    Psychology at the Carnegie Institute of
    Technology
  • In 1919, Scott founded The Scott Company, the
    first organisation dedicated to industrial
    psychology
  • Majority of psychologists now employed in applied
    settings

5
Relationship between applied and academic
psychology
  • Applied psychology rests on bedrock of academic
    research
  • History shows how applied work follows pure
    work
  • Psychological testing and individual differences
    ? Personnel selection (e.g. IQ testing and the US
    Army)
  • Experimental psychology ? Human factors
    engineering psychology (e.g. ergonomic design of
    nuclear power station control rooms, weapons
    guidance systems)
  • Personality and social psychology ? Employee
    relations (e.g. team-building exercises)
  • Abnormal psychology ? Clinical psychology health
    psychology counselling and psychotherapy (e.g.
    schizophrenia treatments)
  • Developmental psychology ? Educational psychology
    (e.g. Piaget and skills expected of children in
    the National Curriculum)

6
Areas of applied psychology
  • Major areas in the UK are the big professional
    domains
  • Clinical psychology (diagnosis and treatment of
    mental disorders)
  • Counselling psychology (improve personal and
    interpersonal functioning focussing on emotional,
    social, and vocational issues)
  • Educational psychology (improving learning
    processes)
  • Forensic psychology (applying psychology to legal
    issues)
  • Health psychology (health maintenance and patient
    education)
  • Occupational psychology (work performance and
    organisational functioning)
  • Covered in detail in subsequent lectures
  • There are many more domains of applied psychology
  • E.g. consulting psychology (including executive
    coaching), consumer psychology, engineering
    psychology, environmental psychology, military
    psychology

7
Careers in applied psychology
  • Fall within the big professional domains
  • Clinical, educational, forensic, occupational
  • All require further specialist training
  • This usually requires you to have the Graduate
    Basis for Registration with the British
    Psychological Society (via e.g. BSc (Hons.)
    Psychology from Leicester)
  • Then register for a doctoral degree (e.g. in
    clinical or educational) or a Masters degree
    (e.g. in forensic)
  • Big current issue is pay parity
  • Occupational (i.e. business funding) and clinical
    (i.e. training bottleneck) psychologists earned
    most
  • Other career options
  • Business and commerce (e.g., advertising,
    marketing) Organisational development (e.g.,
    performance coaching, human resources) Market
    research Careers advice and guidance Employee
    selection and training Military (assessment,
    training, evaluation) Sports (coaching for
    performance) Psychotherapy and counselling (but
    further specialist training is required)

8
Recommended reading
  • Bayne, R. Horton, I. (eds.). (2003). Applied
    psychology Current issues and new directions.
    London Sage.
  • Coolican, H. et al. (1996). Applied psychology.
    London Hodder Stoughton.
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