Experimental Psychology
General data
Course ID: | 2500-EN_O_33 |
Erasmus code / ISCED: |
14.4
|
Course title: | Experimental Psychology |
Name in Polish: | Experimental Psychology |
Organizational unit: | Faculty of Psychology |
Course groups: |
obligatory courses for 2 year |
ECTS credit allocation (and other scores): |
(not available)
|
Language: | English |
Type of course: | obligatory courses |
Short description: |
This course is designed to introduce students to the philosophy, principles, and methods of scientific research in experimental psychology. Students will learn how to plan, conduct and analyze their own experimental research, and how to communicate the results of their research to others. Students will develop the knowledge and skills to apply and critique the scientific method in future courses (e.g. empirical/theoretical paper, master thesis). |
Full description: |
This course is designed to introduce students to the philosophy, principles, and methods of scientific research in experimental psychology. Students will learn how to plan, conduct and analyze their own experimental research, and how to communicate the results of their research to others. Students will develop the knowledge and skills to apply and critique the scientific method in future courses (e.g. empirical/theoretical paper, master thesis). Course objectives: To help students become (more) comfortable with experimental research. Although our goal is not (necessarily) to master computational aspects of statistics, students will be expected to master some statistical concepts. To develop an understanding of the language, methods, and standards of scientific research. To enable students to generate research questions of interest, and teach them how they can use the tools of research and statistical methods to address their questions. This includes learning how to phrase research questions, formulating hypotheses, conducting computerized/internet literature searches, following ethical principles, selecting an appropriate design and sampling strategy, forming appropriate conclusions, and writing a paper that effectively describes the research. If one cannot effectively communicate one’s research findings, those findings will remain generally unknown. To develop an appreciation of the need for a commitment to research as part of the life of scientist or/and professional psychologists. To help students develop a general spirit of inquiry and an ability to think critically. |
Bibliography: |
1) Shaughnessy, J. J., Zechmeister, E. B. & Zechmeister, J. J. (2000). Research Methods in Psychology, 5th ed. Boston, MA: McGraw Hill. 2) American Psychological Association. (2001). Publication manual of the American Psychological Association, 5th ed. Washington, DC |
Learning outcomes: |
Students: Will learn practically the basics logic of empirical study Will develop skills with a range of practical procedures in order to create and conduct empirical study. After completing the course student will be able to ask valid research question, set correct hypothesis, plan and conduct study to address the hypothesis. Analyze and interpret results and report it in written and oral form. Students will be able to read and understand and evaluate critically other empirical work. |
Assessment methods and assessment criteria: |
Class participation is mandatory this is a 30 hours course so two absences are allowed (regardless the reasons). Research Project (40 points) Throughout the semester, you will be working in a small groups to complete a research project. The research project will include generation of a research topic, data collection, data analysis, and presentation of the results. Your final grade will be based on two things: group presentation, and paper. Paper (25 points): You will write up your research project in APA format including a title page, abstract, introduction, method, results, discussion and references. You will be graded on the content of your paper, the quality of your writing, and APA formatting. Presentation (15): On the last day of class, you will have a small paper session for only the students in class. At this session, each group will need to present their research project (~15 minutes) and answer one question, regarding your research project. Homework: During semester there will be several homework assignments in total worth 30 points. Exams: There will be two exams, midterm (10 points) and final (20 points) if you fail you can retake any of them after end of the course. Unannounced quizzes: During course You should expect ~3 unannounced quizzes concerning assigned literature. A quiz can allow you to gain points (if you score more than 70%), have no influence on your points (between 50% and 70%), or loose point (if you score less than less than 50%). In total you can gain (or loose) a maximum of 15 points. Course requirements: Class participation. (max 2 absences, regardless of excuse) Completing all class assignments (project and homework). Passing exams |
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