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Contrasting Student and Instructor Views of Psychology Jeffrey Holmes ICTP : July 15, 2008
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Introduction Calls for critical thinking skills Students who “hate math and science” Potential differences between students and instructors Scientist-Practitioner Model Current Objective: Compare students and instructors on interests and views of psychology
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Method Participants undergraduate students ( N = 282) college and high-school psychology instructors ( N = 160) (119 college instructors) Instruments Scientist-Practitioner Inventory (Leong & Zachar, 1991) Psychology as Science Scale (Friedrich, 1996) Procedure online administration
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Results Professors tended more toward viewing psychology as a science than did students M(prof) = 89.55, SD = 8.28 M(students) = 75.63, SD = 8.89 Professors had higher scientific interests than students M(prof)= 74.23, SD = 18.65 M(students) = 53.99, SD = 14.59 Students had higher practitioner interests than professors M(students) = 69.91, SD = 15.03 M(prof) = 53.45, SD = 23.68
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Item Level PAS Data “ Carefully controlled research is not likely to be useful in solving psychological problems. ” (neutral or agree) college professors: 7.6%, college students: 28.4% “ Our ability as humans to behave in any way we choose makes our attempts to predict behavior ineffective. ” (neutral or agree) college professors: 10.9%, college students: 35.4% “ Psychological advice given in popular books and magazines is often as useful as more research- based claims. ” (neutral or agree) college professors: 11.7%, college students: 34.4%
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Item Level PAS Data “ Courses in psychology place too much emphasis on research and experimentation. ” (neutral or agree) college professors: 5.9%, college students: 36.9% “ Students get little benefit from learning about procedures for conducting psychology experiments. ” (neutral or agree) college professors: 0 (0%), college students: 20.1% “ The Study of Psychology Should be seen primarily as a science. ” (neutral or disagree) college professors: 6.7%, college students: 36.9%
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Conclusions and Implications Disconnect between instructors and (at least some) students? Context provided by previous findings Solution is elusive – dissonance is powerful Students are not blank slates
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Contact Info Jeffrey Holmes – jholmes@ithaca.edu
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