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Psychology 390A-390B. The Teaching of Psychology (6-4)

 
Professional Course: Discussion, lecture, practice. Prerequisite: advanced graduate standing in psychology or a closely related discipline and consent of instructor. Methods and problems of teaching psychology at the undergraduate and graduate levels; curriculum design and evaluation. Practical experience in the preparation and presentation of material. (S/U grading only; deferred grading only, pending completion of sequence.)—II-III. (II-III.)

Mentor: Dr. Dean Keith Simonton, Distinguished Professor of Psychology

Course Structure | Course Resources


COURSE STRUCTURE

This professional course is distributed over two consecutive quarters, winter and spring. Only eight of you can be enrolled in any given year, and you must complete both quarters to receive credit for the course. Hence, you should only take this course if you are 100% sure you are going to complete the two-quarter sequence. To drop out early means that you will impose an unfair burden on your fellow students, who will have to cover for your absence. Even worse, you will have denied the opportunity for someone else to enroll in a course that always has a long waiting list.

Winter quarter: You will first select the textbooks to be used in actual instruction in the spring so that we can get everybody copies as soon as possible. We will then discuss both the philosophy of teaching and the mechanics of instruction, with emphasis on covering introductory psychology courses at the lower-division level. Next we will devote the remainder of winter quarter to practice lectures to enable all of you to receive feedback from both me and your fellow graduate students. The course syllabus for winter 2013 is found here.

Spring quarter: Because eight of you will be enrolled in this professional course, you will be distributed between two sections of Psychology 1. Hence, each of you will have responsibility for one quarter of a course. Because a 4-unit quarter course is supposed to have approximately 40 in-class hours, that means that you each will be responsible for about 10 of those hours. You will also write the multiple-choice exam for your course module. Teaching evaluations will collected at the end of each of your modules so that the undergraduates can give you feedback beyond that provided by me. For sample syllabi from prior 390 Psychology 1 sections, please go here.

Although you do not receive a letter grade in this course, your performance will clearly undergo qualitative evaluation both winter and spring quarters. The resulting overall evaluation can become the basis of any letters of recommendations that you may later ask me to write when you apply for temporary or ladder-track positions that place some degree of emphasis on teaching effectiveness - positions that predominate in community and liberal arts colleges.

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COURSE RESOURCES

Resources can be grouped into three categories, namely, websites, videos/audios, publications, documents, and presentations.
 

Websites
 

    Extramural


    Intramural


Audiovisuals


Publications


Documents


Presentations

 

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Last Revised: January 8, 2013
 

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