=
new link as of July 1, 2008
Content
Analysis
These
assignments ask students to apply course concepts through the analysis
of movies, television shows, novels and other works of fiction or
non-fiction.
Content
analysis resources - The best aspect of this site is the set of
links to many other good content analysis sites. [added
4/5/04]
Grading
rubrics for film analysis and proverb analysis papers - To find these
rubrics on this page, click the drop down menu in the upper righthand
corner and select the Social Psychology course from Terry Humphreys.
[added 3/23/04]
Film
Analysis
North
Country - "This extra credit assignment consists of
elucidating how particular stereotyping, prejudice, and discrimination
concepts are exemplified in the movie 'North Country.'" - from
Andy Hertel's Introduction to Social Psychology course [added
7/6/06]
Crash
- same assignment for a different film from Hertel's course [added
7/6/06]
Analyze
a film - Jean Mandernach provides a film analysis assignment,
with an extensive list of films and listing of possible social psych
concepts within each of those films. [added 1/15/06]
Film
scene analysis - Sherri Lantinga provides a very detailed assignment
in which students "select an interesting short scene (no more
than 1 minute) that shows a social interaction between two or more
people." With a partner, students then write a paper analyzing
the scene. Finally, the partners give a five-minute PowerPoint presentation
of their analysis to the class. The assignment addresses sociological
and psychological perspectives on content analysis. [added
3/1/05]
Applying
social cognition - students choose from three films and apply
social cognitive concepts to at least three instances in the film
- from Kristi Lemm - other movies Kristi has used for this assignment:
The Usual Suspects, Lone Star, House of Games, Fight Club, A League
of their Own, The Shawshank Redemption, The Sum of All Fears, Ma
Vie en Rose, 12 Angry Men, The Hurricane, Contact, About a Boy,
Strawberry and Chocolate, Annie Hall, 12 Monkeys, Mystic River,
The Fisher King, Minority Report, Howards End, Amelie, Talk
to Her, Changing Lanes [added 12/13/02]
Film
analysis
- over 25 films for students to choose from - from Monica Biernat's
social psych course [added 3/29/02]
Film analysis (clicking this link opens a Word
document) - students choose from four films
-- an excerpt
from a student paper for this assignment
Analyzing
a play - Chuck Huff asks his students to view three plays during
his Social Psychology course: Macbeth (two versions) and A Streetcar
Named Desire. Then he asks them to analyze the plays in terms of how
close relationships are portrayed (Paper
1) or in terms of how aggression is portrayed (Paper
2). Interesting assignments. Also see the links on the paper pages
for some excellent grading rubrics. [added 7/8/07]
Find
social psych in a children's book - Students can earn bonus points
by writing brief descriptions of how social psych appears in children's
books they select. [added 1/15/06]
Guide
for conducting a content analysis [added 3/1/05]
Portrayal
of jury decision-making in popular culture
- In her Social Psychology in the Courtroom course, Kristi Costabile
assigns her students to "choose a film or TV show focused on
the courtroom and analyze whether the theories and strategies discussed
in class are represented accurately in the film." Click on the
"details" link at the bottom of the page to see the full
assignment. [added
11/18/04]
Analyzing
a Play -
very interesting and involved assignment in Sherri Lantinga's social
psychology class. Students attend a rehearsal and actual performance
of the play The House of Bernarda Alda. They also discuss play
with director and cast and write a final paper analyzing play in terms
of social psychology.
Apply
a theory - this "assignment involves selecting a theory from
the text or a topic discussed in lecture that you find particularly
interesting, evaluating it, and relating it to an event you believe
is important or to your own social experience" - many of the
sample topics provided ask students to apply a theory to a
film, ads or common behaviors
Opinion-based
article - students analyze an article of their choosing in terms
of course concepts
Group
conflict article - students analyze article in terms of course
concepts
Research
Summaries 
These
assignments typically ask students to summarize a research article
to develop and demonstrate an ability to read and interpret the literature.
Other
Research Analyses

Methodological
critique - Mark Schaller asks his Thinking Clearly About Psychology
students to critique the article "Don't the girls get prettier
at closing time: A country and western application to psychology."
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 5, 122-125. [added
3/23/04]
Apply
findings of article to current topic
- from Angela Bryan [added 12/11/02]
Research
Review - students in Jonathon Brown's Psychology of the Self-concept
course review and discuss two or more articles from a research area
- possible topics are offered [added 11/7/02]
Reading
Comments
- Gary Levine asks students to comment upon and rate assigned readings.
He provides forms for the assignment. It serves several purposes
for him. "First, it will encourage you to read the material
more than once (early on as we are covering it, and then again before
the exam). Second, it will give me an opportunity to see what is
confusing you and how you are interpreting things so that I can
clarify things before the exam. Third, it allows me to see what
stories and studies from the readings "stick-out" and
would therefore make good exam questions." [added
8/28/02]
Social
proverbs - students select a social proverb from list and review
a few relevant articles
Projects

Fact
or fiction? - A list of 20 "hints" for resisting unwanted
influences from Philip Zimbardo -- you could ask students to pick
one hint from the list and evaluate its validity in terms of current
research, or have them design a test of it. (Also, find more excerpts
here from Zimbardo's book The Lucifer Effect.) [added
12/12/07]
Observation
Task - In
Nyla Branscombe's Stereotyping and Prejudice Across Cultures course,
students complete a very interesting data gathering task. It is carefully
designed so that it is not very difficult for students to conduct,
yet provides a good opportunity for students to consider research
issues as well as "how social categorization affect nonverbal
behavior." [added 11/24/07]
The
International Tsunami Museum - The 2007 Social Psychology Network
Action Teaching Awards were announced, and the winner was this very
inspiring museum project from David Sattler. Students in David's independent
study course helped build and designed exhibits for a museum in Thailand
that "could educate the public about tsunamis and help people
move forward with their lives by emphasizing hope, resilience, and
the strength of human spirit." A less intensive variation on
this idea would be for your students to create online exhibits applying
course concepts around some theme. [added 7/7/07]
Shadow/Role-play
Exercise - An honorable mention for the 2007 Action Teaching Awards
mentioned above was this exercise from Bonnie Moradi's Psychology
of Women course. "In this exercise, students spend a day shadowing
or role-playing a woman who is different from them in age, ability
status, religion, race/ethnicity, sexual orientation, pregnancy, or
motherhood. Students who conduct a shadow spend a full day with the
woman they select, and students who conduct a role-play transform
themselves into the woman they select (e.g., wear padded clothing
to role-play a pregnant woman)." [added 7/7/07]
Using
Lessons from the Holocaust to Reduce Bullying - The final honorable
mention from the 2007 Action Teaching Award was given to Ruth T. Hannon
for her creative assignment in her Perspectives of the Holocaust course.
From the proposal: "Over the next several class sessions, our
college students meet in small groups to design projects to be taken
to the middle school. Their task is to use lessons from the Holocaust
to teach about the dynamics of prejudice, hate speech, and bullying
close to home. For example, our students have spoken about the psychology
of conformity and depicted how conformity operates in bullying situations.
Middle school students come to see the power of conformity in such
situations, and they learn ways to resist being drawn into bullying
behaviors. Lively discussions follow and, oftentimes, middle schoolers
share stories about bullying they've witnessed." [added
7/7/07]
Read
a trade book and translate it into a useful application - Traci
Giuliano shares a creative assignment in which she asks "students
to read a trade book written by a social psychologist (in a few cases,
they are not written by social psychologists but have many relevant
applications, as in the case of Malcolm Gladwell or John Gottman)
and then develop a useful application (e.g., a workshop, video, website,
pamphlet, etc.) from it." Here is the
grading sheet for it. Here is a
list of trade books Traci has compiled. But she is looking for
more. If you have any examples of good books written for a lay audience
by social psychologists, please send them to Traci at giuliant@southwestern.edu.
[added 7/6/07]
Demonstrate
a phenomenon: An assignment update! - The link takes you
to an assignment I posted a couple years ago from my colleague Heather
Coon. She has since updated it in a manner she says works much better.
So, I thought I would tell you about it. Briefly, the assignment asks
students to design a little study of their own to test out a question
related to course material. It gets them involved in social psych
more personally, and it gets them to think like a social psychologist
a bit. Because this is a lower-level psych course, and many of the
students have not yet had research design, Heather doesn't ask for
a lit review and a complicated design. She simply asks them to design
a task related to a social psych topic, have some group or groups
complete it, and collect the data. Then they take 3-5 minutes to present
their findings to the class.
Initially, Heather used each presentation as an introduction to that
topic in class. This time around she had students pick a topic and
try it out after that topic had been discussed. She has found that
the "experimenter" and the other students in class have
a much better grasp of what is going on if they design the task for
something that has already been discussed. The students recognize
that their "test" is rather limited in a number of ways,
and Heather has found that students are good at identifying the limitations
and possible alternative explanations, particularly since they now
understand the material better. Most of the students conduct experimental
tests, but they can be descriptive or correlational questions as well.
Many students create materials ahead of time, even occasionally pre-testing
them. Typically they will meet with Heather to make sure what they
are trying makes sense.
Heather also requires that their presentation use PowerPoint (typically
only 3-5 slides are needed) to add some professionalism to it and
to make sure they can use it. She tries to have a few better students
go first to serve as good models. Next time, she might try it in pairs
to reduce the number of presentations and to promote some collaboration.
If you want to talk to Heather about this more, you can contact her
at hmcoon@noctrl.edu.
Do you have any assignments you have revised or adapted that have
significantly improved the outcome you are getting from students?
I would love to hear about them and possibly share them in the Newsletter.
Your assignment doesn't have to be online. You can either just describe
it to me or send me a copy at jfmueller@noctrl.edu.
[added 1/1/07]
A
choice among four - In Bonnie Rosenblatt's Social Psychology course,
students can choose from four term projects that include applying
three theories or principles to current events, a select (given) set
of films, or an advertising or marketing campaign, or designing a
research proposal. [added 1/1/07]
Studying people's
views of legal contracts - unique assignment from Valerie Hans'
Psychology and the Law course in which groups of students conduct
a study to discover how people think about legal contracts [added
1/1/07]
Interview
an older woman and older man - In Silvia Sara Canetto's Psychological
Perspective of the Female Experience course, students interview a
man and a woman who are at least 60 years old. Detailed interview
forms are provided which includes specific questions to ask such as
"What were you taught about being a girl and a woman?" Teams
of students then combine their interview information to draw some
conclusions. Scroll down page to find assignment. [added
7/6/06]
Research
for community action - Lori Rosenthal teaches her students "about
research methodology through research projects that make an important
difference to the local community." This project assignment was
selected as the winner of the Social Psychology Network's inaugural
Action Teaching Award. [added 4/6/06]
Applying
social psych to real-world problem - In Jeff Bartel's Social Psychology
course, students participate in groups to design a semester-long project
in which they apply course concepts to address a real-world problem.
Along with writing a final
paper (see grading
sheet) students keep reflective journals along the way. [added
2/22/06]
Avoiding
social loafing - For the above project from Jeff Bartel, students
also complete a contract stipulating that they will work to avoid
social loafing and encourage participation among all group members.
They are also asked to reflect upon the process. [added
2/22/06]
Oral
history authority assignment - Students conduct an oral history
interview "examining a decision under duress" -- from Steven
Gilbert and Paul Conway's Obedience to Authority course [added
2/22/06]
Teach
a concept to others - Jean Mandernach asks her students to design
a 5-10 minute interactive activity or demonstration for teaching high
school students about a concept or theory from social psychology.
[added 1/15/06]
Stereotypes
and Prejudice - Several interesting projects from Irene Blair's
Stereotypes and Prejudice course [added
9/15/05]
Merging
art and social psychology - Nick Schweitzer asks his students
to demonstrate/comment on any of the social psychological phenomena
discussed by using any artistic medium they wish to create a project.
He includes some samples of acceptable and unacceptable(!) projects.
[added 8/30/05]
Situational
Observations - From Sherri Lantinga's Social Psychology course,
students choose to engage in "objective observations" or
participant observations in a situation of their choice. For example,
Sherri suggests a dentist office as a possible location, with specific
suggestions for behaviors to observe. Very well thought out. [added
3/1/05]
Anger
Observations - another interesting assignment from Sherri Lantinga
[added 3/1/05]
Gender
topics
- Traci Craig has given her students several interesting projects
in her Psychology of Women course. They include
Mock
trial - In her Psychology & Law class, Kim MacLin assigns
a semester-long project to engage students in the criminal justice
process. Students participate in a mock crime and a mock trial through
specific roles. Students receive group and individual grades along
the way. [added
11/18/04]
Research
Project(?): Over 13,000 rock song quotes! - I'm not sure what
you can do with this resource, but I know you are aware that social
psychology has investigated the wisdom in many a song lyric (e.g.,
"girls are prettier at closing time"). Perhaps you could
have your students do a lit review to substantiate or refute one of
these lyrics, or to test its validity. Or, perhaps you just want to
have a few pearls of wisdom to throw out. If you ever use these I
would love to hear what you did with them! [added
7/1/04]
Create
an original game - Erin Strahan has taken an idea applied in math
and other subjects and adapted it to social psychology, i.e., having
groups of 4-5 create an original game incorporating social psychology
concepts. [added 6/15/04]
Service
learning experience - Students in Mark Covey's Social Psychology
course participate in a significant service learning requirement which
includes a service learning journal. [added 6/15/04]
Developing
a survey - Here's a very interesting and detailed assignment from
Gregory Herek, this time from his Survey and Questionnaire Research
Methods course. Students develop a two-page self-administered survey
for a population of their choosing. Lots of mini-assignments included
along the way on this term-long project. [added 3/23/04]
Group
project: Investigate an organization
- In his Social Psychology of Organization course, Richard Hackman
requires his students to participate in a semester-long project which
involves "the collection of data about one or more actual groups
that operate in organizational settings." [added
11/11/03]
Interview
a Volunteer - Students in Janet Swim's Applied Social Psychology
course apply concepts from their reading on altruism by interviewing
a volunteer regarding his/her reasons for volunteering. [added
2/4/03]
En Español - The
"interview a volunteer" assignment has been translated into
Spanish by Beatriz Cortés [added 3/8/06]
Group
Project: Coding Personal Ads - In Ben Le's Laboratory in Social
Psychology course, students in groups code personal ads examining
gender differences. [added 2/1/03]
Project:
Intimate Relationships - Students in Jennifer Butler's course
interview attached and unattached males and females and then write
a paper about it. [added 2/1/03]
The
Negotiation Project
- Chuck Huff assigns an involved and intriguing project in his Group
Processes and Social Conflict course. From the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, students choose a client (e.g., Likud, Hamas, the U.S.).
Then, in groups, they learn about their client and present that info
to the class, set up meetings and negotiations outside of class with
other client groups, and, finally, participate in an in-class negotiation
among the client groups that agree to participate. Chuck also provides
the class with relevant links and documents. [added
8/29/02]
CensusScope
- easy and well organized way to search through the 2000 U.S. Census
data, with charts, maps and rankings - do any of you have your students
look at and use demographic data of any type? I would like to hear
what kinds of activities or assignments you use so I can share them
with the group. Send any ideas to me at jfmueller@noctrl.edu.
[added 6/7/02]
Group
Website Project Rubric
- Timothy Pychyl assigns his students in groups to create a website
that summarizes research related to a social problem. He has provided
a detailed rubric to evaluate the group's work. Follow the navigation
links at the top of the above page to see the rest of the rubric.
A description of the group project can be found here
Self-projects
-
in his Self and Social Psychology course, Allen McConnell assigns
his students to "identify a topic for self-understanding and
self-improvement (e.g., weight loss, community service, exercise regimen,
reduction in swearing) that can be monitored on a weekly basis. The
purpose of the self-project is to provide a work-in-progress where
students apply theory and findings in the course to a concrete, self-relevant
situation."!
Rate
the infant
- gender study - students "will (1) obtain ratings of a pictured
baby who is either identified as a male, identified as a female, or
not given a gender identification, and (2) summarize what their group
found"
Design
a persuasive campaign or behavioral change intervention
- students identify a real problem in local community and design a
plan to change it - from a seminar on propaganda and behavioral change
- scroll down page near the bottom to "Field Project and Report"
Variety
of projects - eight creative assignments described here asking
students to apply social psychology including a) creating and presenting
a video report, b) assembling a portfolio of media clippings, c) designing
a persuasive public service campaign and more
Web
tutorials - Richard Sherman asks his advanced
social psychology students "to inform and educate a visitor to
the website about a specific topic in Social Psychology." See
examples.
Group
web research project - in groups, students are asked to create
a web-based research resource about a social problem of interest.
Good grading rubrics for the project can be found here.
Experiential
projects - from Phil Zimbardo's Psychology of Mind Control course
- students experience social psych first-hand by being a "Deviant
for a Day," or "an Agent or Target of Social Influence,"
or by engaging in "self-directed change"
Journals

Quote Journal
- This
is not from a social psych course, but I thought it was an interesting
idea that could be adapted to any course. Students find a number of
quotes and then provide commentary, evaluation, or opinion about them,
which could consist of making course connections. [added
11/17/07]
Portfolio
collection
- Marcel Yoder provides an excellent and detailed assignment requiring
students to collect a variety of entries around a particular topic.
Students are provided with detailed diagrams/frameworks to help them
organize their thoughts and their portfolios. [added
12/1/04]
Weekly
social experience assignments
- Subscriber Jamonn Campbell describes a nice variation on asking
students to find examples of course concepts applying to their lives.
A sample answer is provided. Also take a look at his literature review
assignment and samples.
[added 4/5/04]
E-mail
commentaries - Toni Schmader requires her students to respond
via e-mail to material presented in lecture or text four times during
the semester. Scroll down syllabus to assignment. [added
3/23/04]
Journal/Portfolio
- another good example of requiring students to collect examples of
everyday phenomena which illustrate course concepts - also includes
a grading scale for the samples - from Monica Rodriguez's Social Cognition
course - scroll down page [added
11/17/03]
Concept
maps
- I am asking my students to graphically describe the relationship
between eight or more concepts in relation to some theme. For example,
in the first concept map assignment students drew a map describing
the relationship between three social motives (social comparison,
consistency and control) and related concepts (e.g., relative deprivation,
insufficient justification, reactance, unrealistic optimism) we discussed
as they connect to an event of their choosing. On my essay tests I
ask short questions that require students to connect two or three
concepts together. But the map allows me to see them connect significantly
more concepts in a more complex manner. This past fall (2002) when
I first assigned concept maps the students struggled with the first
map because they (and I) did not quite know what they should be doing.
This time around (spring 2003) I shared a couple maps from the fall,
and I received a much better collection of maps. The first map was
completed in pairs; some of the remaining maps will be completed individually
and others in pairs.
Assignments
This link will take you to the schedule page of my course. In the
righthand column you will find links to each of the five concept
map assignments as you scroll down the page.
I
welcome any feedback on this assignment.
[added 7/21/03]
Daily
Diaries: Group-related incidents - Students in Janet Swim's Intergroup
and Intragroup Relations course are asked to "write a short description
of all the group related incidents that occurred to you or you observed
during the day." Students also record certain information about
each event including a rating of each event in terms of how indicative
they think it is of prejudice. [added 2/4/03]

Service Learning
Journal
Novel
Journal
Two journal assignments from Elizabeth Yost Hammer's social psychology
course - the first link above is to a service learning journal assignment.
The second link is to a journal assignment in which students respond
to their reading of a novel, Stones from the River, by Ursula
Hegi. Both assignments are detailed and structured. [added
12/06/02]
Decision
journal
- students record decision-related entries for Judgment and Decision-making
course - scroll down page to view
Negotiations
journal - assignment for a course on Negotiation
Media
journal
- students find examples in the media of social psychological phenomena
- scroll down page to view
Social
psychology portfolio - students collect popular press material
(e.g., newspaper articles, magazine articles, advertisements, comic
strips, photographs, advice columns) and write brief reflections applying
social psychology
Journal
assignment
- students are asked to apply specific social psychological concepts
to their experiences - scroll down page to find journal assignment
Journal
assignment - same as above - a very large sample
of "best of" entries collected over the years - at the beginning
of class I list the entry #'s on the board of the concepts we will
be discussing so students can read entries generated by previous students
Journal
assignment - same as above - a few sample entries are given
Exams
Online 
Review
sheets - Take a look at P. Neils Christensen's unique review sheets
for his students. He categorizes the topics by whether students should
define/describe, interpret/provide example, list the key points, or
contrast the concepts. [added 3/1/05]
Classroom
assessment techniques
- some brief assessments to be used in the classroom to assess student
comprehension
Essay:
Possible
essay questions - from Nancy White's Social Psychology course
[added 7/8/07]
Essay
questions - set 1 - set
2 - set 3 - from Jean Mandernach's
social psych course - practice essay questions [added
1/15/06]
Possible
essay questions - These study guide questions from Eugene Borgida's
Attitudes and Social Behavior course provide a lot of good possible
essay questions, even if you don't use the Eagly and Chaiken text.
[added 1/7/06]
Possible
essay questions - Possible essay questions in these study guides
from Austin Bowman's Intro to Social Psychology course [added
1/7/06]
Essay
questions for social psychology - Scroll down to the social psychology
course and look for the study items -- they make for very good essay
questions as well. [added 3/1/05]
Short
answer essay questions - Scroll down this page to a list of topics.
Clicking on those links will take you to a large number of possible
quiz/exam questions from Chuck Huff. [added
7/1/04]
Possible
essay questions - Matthew Winslow sets up the essay portion of
his exams the way I do. He gives his students a set of
essay questions before the exam and tells them that he will use some
subset of the questions on the exam. Along with solving some managerial
problems, I find this method produces more and better
studying for the exams.
Possible
essay questions - scroll down to review questions
Possible
essay questions - I give students 12-18 of these questions one
week prior to an exam and then select 8-10 of them for in-class exam
Essay
exam - students analyze a single experiment article given to them
Mixed
and Other:
Variety
of essay and multiple choice questions - Paula Pietromonaco provides
her Social Psychology students with a sample of possible essay and
multiple choice questions [added 7/6/06]
Hot
Potatoes - excellent, free program for creating a variety of your
own online tests (e.g., multiple-choice, matching, crossword)
Oral
Presentations/Discussion 
Oral
Presentations
Article presentation - Others have students present article summaries in their classes, but this assignment from Jennifer Spoor is spelled out nicely for her students in the Advanced Seminar in Social Psychology: Small Groups. Scroll down page to find this assignment. [added 7/23/08]
Group
PowerPoint presentations on controversial issues - Ronald McLaughlin
requires his students to put together a PowerPoint presentation applying
social concepts to a controversial issue. Click on "Syllabus"
to read the assignment. Click on a list of student presentations at
the bottom to see some good student examples. [added
6/9/04]
Journal
article report
- scroll down page to view
Criteria
and evaluation scale for poster presentations
- from C.L. Hansvick [added 7/16/03]
Guidelines
and rubric for groups of three students
Oral
presentation evaluation sheet
Group
presentations: Jonahue! -
While knocking around in Don Forsyth's site, I couldn't help remembering
the times I taught Group Dynamics many years ago (using Don's excellent
text). So, bear with me as I reminisce and share a rather odd class
assignment. I was looking for some way for my students to learn about
group dynamics while working in groups, and at the same time I wanted
to develop their oral speaking skills. But I didn't want them to give
the usual oral presentations in which they delivered a prepared speech.
They got enough of that (or at least some of that) in their other
courses. I wanted them to learn to speak extemporaneously and knowledgeably
about a topic. So, I asked myself, where do we find experts speaking
publicly extemporaneously? One venue I thought of was the talk show.
Sometimes experts are invited to come on a talk show, not to give
a speech, but to answer questions. At the time, one of the talk shows
doing this was hosted by Phil Donahue. My first name is Jon, and,
voila... "Jonahue" was born! Each week I turned my Group
Dynamics classroom into a talk show. I, Jonahue, was the host. A group
of three students was "invited" to be the guests on the
show because they were experts (if they prepared well) on a particular
group dynamics topic. More specifically, the group was there to use
its expertise on the topic to apply it to a specific topic-related
problem. The other members of the class were the audience and were
required to ask questions. As host, I also asked questions. And, I
recorded my wife asking questions I prepared for her that I played
during class as if she were a live caller to the show. Each group
of three students went through this ordeal three times during the
term. It was fun! And, more importantly, I think it worked. [added
3/6/02]

Discussion
and Question-asking
Grading
rubrics/scales
Online
discussion postings rubric - scroll down to bottom of page
[added 7/1/06]
Group
participation rubric - a very good and detailed rubric for
"assessing group members' ability to participate effectively
as part of a team" - from Bill Altman [added
2/22/06]
Online
discussion grading rubric - a very good, detailed rubric from
Lynn Sprott [added 9/2/05]
Participation
grading scale - Helen Harton offers a good grading scale for
class participation in her Social Psychology course. Scroll down
page to find Class Discussion section. [added
11/18/04]
Criteria
and evaluation scales for class participation and small group
discussion - from C.L. Hansvick [added 7/16/03]
Grading
Schemes for Participation/Reading - In Erin Ross' class above,
the reading questions are worth 10% of a student's grade. Instructors
often look to some kind of incentive to get students to participate
in class or online or to do the reading. (See the last issue,
Vol. 1, No. 10, for subscribers' suggestions.) But some instructors
are reluctant to give a significant number of points for tasks
that may not be indicative of understanding of course material
for fear of inflating the grades. I use a couple schemes to provide
incentive without giving away too many points. One simple approach
I and others use is to remove points for failure to meet obligations.
No points can be earned for contributing entries to the online
discussion board or performing small tasks in class I may ask
of them, but they will lose a few points if they don't complete
the assignment. The potential loss of a few points is all it usually
takes to get my students to complete the tasks.
A more complicated scheme I have successfully used to encourage
completion of reading assignments was adapted from Barbara Walvoord,
Director of the Kaneb Center for Teaching Excellence at Notre
Dame University. (Ed note: I highly recommend Barbara Walvoord
faculty development workshops.) I assign one or two brief questions
for a reading, chapter or portion of a chapter. Students can typically
answer the questions in one or two sentences. However, they cannot
just look up the answers in the reading. The nature of the questions
require them to make some sense of the reading, even though a
very brief response is required. I can grade a stack of 30 of
these answers (which students must turn in at the beginning of
the class at which we will discuss the reading) in less than five
minutes because I simply look for effort. I give an answer a "check"
if sufficient effort is apparent and a "minus" if it
is not. Then I apply the following grading scheme. If a student
received 90% or more checks on the questions assigned throughout
the term then I will raise that student's final course grade to
the next highest grade level (e.g., B to A) if the student's final
grade is within 10 points of the next highest grade level. For
example, if 450 points are required for an A in the course, and
a student has accumulated 443 points by the end of the course
and has received at least 90% checks then that student will receive
an A in the course. However, if another student received at least
90% checks but only accumulated 438 points (i.e., more than 10
points away from 450), that student would receive a B in the course.
Additionally, if a student received fewer than 70% checks on the
questions then I will lower (yes, lower) the student's final grade
to the next lowest grade level if the student's final grade is
within 10 points of the next lowest grade level. So, a student
with 455 points could have her final course grade lowered from
an A to a B if she did not put enough effort into answering the
reading questions. Finally, students who receive between 70% and
90% checks will not have their final grades altered. Did you follow
all that? 
Students like this grading scheme and assignment, it takes very
little work on my part, and I have found it effectively encourages
students to do the reading and makes class discussions better
without inflating grades. [added 8/30/02]
Do you use other schemes you would like to share? Send them to
me at jfmueller@noctrl.edu.
Encouraging
voluntary participation - "Asking questions: Promoting
student-faculty interchange in the classroom," by Judith Larkin
and Harvey Pines, is a interesting article describing strategies
to encourage even the reluctant contributors to voluntarily participate
in the classroom. [added 1/13/06]
Debates
in the Classroom
Useful
or not? Talk among yourselves. I occasionally use debates in class
to promote student engagement and discussion of a topic. Sometimes
I randomly assign them to a position (good way to illustrate the
saying-is-believing effect) and sometimes I let them choose which
side they will be on. Topics I have used include:
-
Do
you believe your attitudes shape your behaviors more or do your
behaviors shape your attitudes more?
-
Is
there such a thing as a truly altruistic behavior?
-
Harry
Wallace shared the following debate topic: "Regarding
debate topics, I like to introduce the topic of stereotypes
& prejudice in my introductory social psych courses with
a debate on affirmative action as a university admissions policy.
I divide the class in half, have students generate their arguments
(without having read the relevant research), and then let them
go at it. Then, after students have thought about the issues,
I introduce the research that speaks to the issues they raised
(and failed to consider)."
- Eric
Hansen shared the following topics: "In a research methods
course I have used the article:
Middlemist, R. D., Knowles, E. S:, & Matter, C. F (1976). Personal
space invasions in the lavatory: Suggestive evidence for arousal.
JPSP, 33, 541-546.
I have had students write a critique of the study including identifying
the theory being tested, the dependent and independent variables,
the methodology, etc. In class I've had debates regarding the ethics
of the study (is it okay to hide in a stall and use a periscope to
watch men urinate and see how long it takes them to start and finish
without their knowledge or consent) based on the current APA ethics
guidelines. When I first started I let the students pick the side
they wanted and it was more of a whole-class discussion, but I quickly
found that no one wanted to argue that the study was ethical so I
was forced to defend it. Since then I have instead told them in advance
that they should prepare both sides of the debate and wherever possible
know how they would respond to counterargue their own position and
arguments, and that which side they would be on would be decided by
a coin toss. I then let them have the
debate in groups of 4 with 2 for and 2 against randomly assigned to
position. That seemed to work better.
I more recently have tried a similar type of debate with Baumeister
and Vohs article taking an economic view of sexuality:
Baumeister, R. F., & Vohs, K. D. (2004). Sexual economics: Sex
as female resource for social exchange in heterosexual interactions.
Personality and Social Psychology Review, 8, 339-363.
I tried to let a coin toss decide whether they should defend or attack
the theory, but the discussion was very strained and awkward, so the
students asked if they could decide which side they wanted to be on
to which I agreed. In my experience the article leads to lively discussions."
- Michael
Richards' outburst: Racist or "ragist"? - Here's an
interesting debate you can have in your class regarding the
actor Michael Richards' recent tirade against hecklers in a comedy
club that was filled with a lot of racist comments. Columnist Eric
Zorn asks: Did Richards' outburst arise from racism, or was it the
result of an uncontrollable anger problem? As Zorn suggests, "Maybe
the impulse to use those words came not from a desire to express his
deepest, hidden views on the inherent comparative value of the races
but from a momentary desire to inflict as much pain verbally as he
could upon people at whom he was unjustifiably but extremely furious."
Is it possible to rattle off a list of racial slurs without a racist
intent or without it revealing a deep-seeded prejudice? Here
is video of Richards' outburst. [added 1/1/07]
-
In
a few recent listserv posts, faculty were sharing some ideas for
conducting class debates. Here are a couple examples which the authors
graciously allowed me to share:
From
Shelby Morrison: "Marlo Smith asked about classroom
debates. I use a version for which I have prepared before class
by posting signs on three walls reading "YES," "NO"
and "?." I come to class with a list of statements and
I ask the students to move to sign with which they agree. (This
is a great ice breaker for first meeting of a class. It also gets
the students moving!) I'm getting ready to begin an Adolescent Psych
class and I will use provocative statements such as "Males
are inherently better in math and science"; "It is a OK
for parents to make monetary rewards for good grades"; "Early
maturation is an advantage for females." Depending on class
size, each group is given 3-4 minutes to discuss its stance among
themselves and to select someone to report back to the class. Then,
students are given the chance to change their position (to go from
"Yes" to "?", etc.). Lastly, I report to the
whole class the relevant research on the question after this process.
I especially like this activity for Intro Psychology using statements
that deal with the myths about psychology. Sometimes I do an evaluation
and I find that the learning from this activity "sticks."
It's a good way to get an important concept across. Plan on about
six minutes of class time for each question and don't overdo it.
Four to five good statements are usually enough. Shelby Morrison
Ph.D. Valencia Community College Orlando, Florida Shelby4087@aol.com"
From
Gail Knapp: "Shelby Morrison talked about having students
stand in front of signs that say "yes" "no"
or "?" for statements to start a class discussion and
serve as an ice breaker. I do something similar, but with a few
twists. I make the signs into a continuum with choices from Strongly
agree, Moderately agree, Neutral or No opinion, Moderately Disagree,
and Strongly Disagree across the room. Then I let the students write
the questions they want their classmates to answer. I give them
guidelines about how to write a good survey question before we do
this, and I explain the kinds of things that make good survey questions.
Then I collect their papers (one question from each) anonymously
so no one will know who asked what. Then I read the questions one
at a time and they stand in front of the appropriate sign. Our conversation
is less about what their opinion was on the issues, than it is about
the questions themselves. Were they easy to understand? Were the
terms clear? What information did they gather? One thing they notice
is that some questions don't provide useful information. For example,
a question where the whole class is grouped at one sign causes a
discussion about why that happened. Or questions where they don't
know what to answer and find themselves all grouped in the center
cause a different kind of discussion. We also talk about the public
nature of this kind of survey since almost always there are questions
that I tell them to listen to but not answer. This exercise is a
good icebreaker, but it is also a great way to get students to understand
more about surveys and survey data. -Gail Knapp gknapp@edtech.mcc.edu
Mott Community College" [added 7/19/07]
What
topics have you had students debate? I would be interested in
hearing how you have used debates in your classes and the topics
you have used. Send me replies at jfmueller@noctrl.edu.
I will share them on this page. [added 7/5/06]
"Using
in-class debates to teach gender issues in psychology"
- Jeanne O'Kon and Rachel Sutz have given me permission to share
with you an excellent article they wrote describing "two
formats for using the in-class debate as a strategy to foster
critical thinking in courses on gender." The formats certainly
could be adapted to student debates of other topics/issues. [added
11/18/04]
Class
facilitation - In his Groups and Interpersonal Processes course,
Jeff Joireman assigns groups of three to run a class. Grading scheme
for group participation is provided. Scroll down page to find assignment.
[added 1/8/06]
Discussion
Leader - James Shepperd provides detailed instructions and good
advice for students on being a good discussion leader in his Self
& Identity course. An evaluation scale for the discussion leaders
is also provided. Additionally, 14 or 15 interesting thought topics
are listed for brief papers. Students must complete 12 of them.
[added 3/3/05]
Student-lead
discussion of articles
- Zinta Byrne, for her Advanced Social Psychology course, provides
a good and fairly detailed set of instructions for students who
will, in groups of 2 or 3, lead class discussion of an article.
Scroll down page to "Participation and Discussion Leadership."
[added
11/22/04]
Discussion
questions accompanying Stanovich's How to Think Straight About
Psychology
- excellent set of questions from Paul Smith at Alverno College
- his class discusses the numbered questions and the students write
answers to and hand in the italicized questions [added
9/27/04]
Study
Questions: Aronson's Nobody left to hate: Teaching compassion
after Columbine - Do you use Aronson's Nobody Left to Hate?
At the bottom of this page, Kimberley Ducey provides study questions
for the text. [added
4/06/04]
Resources
for discussing affirmative action - The Center for Research
on Teaching and Learning at the University of Michigan provides
a large number of resources to assist faculty in teaching about
affirmative action. [added 4/5/04]

Discussion
Facilitation
- students in Elizabeth Yost Hammer's Social Psychology course are
required to facilitate two discussions - an evaluation sheet is included
[added 8/30/02]
Reading
Questions/Principal Readers - Erin Ross requires students to submit
questions/comments related to the assigned readings. She also selects
several students to serve as "principal readers" for a particular
class to lead the discussion. Scroll down the syllabus
page to "Seminar Write-up and Class Questions" to read
about how these questions are used. Ross
also includes a brief
summary of APA format. [added 8/30/02]
Lecture
Questions -
David Schneider wants his students to learn how to ask a good question,
so he assigns them to bring a "good" question to class.
He models this assignment by presenting them with a variety of questions
(on this page) for them to think about before class. [added
5/1/02]
Discussion
Questions -
Ben Le, in his psychology of close relationships course, asks his
students to prepare discussion questions. Students submit 4-6 questions
once per semester and they are posted on the course website. You can
see examples linked from this page. [added 5/1/02]
Writing
Hypotheses -
Also from Ben Le, this assignment requires students to submit a hypothesis
(and a brief methodology for testing it) ten times a semester. The
class discusses how it would test some of the hypotheses. [added
5/1/02]
Class
discussion leader
- detailed instructions for student-led discussions including a rubric
(grading scale) - scroll down page to view
Student-led
class discussion
- scroll down page to "presentation on a theoretical topic"
to read description of assignment - evaluation criteria included
Designing/Conducting
Research 
Creating
an informed consent form - a tutorial for students on why and
how to create an informed consent form -- it includes a quiz to test
them on their knowledge. [added 1/1/07]
Experience
sampling - Want your students to conduct some experience sampling?
Here's some free software to do just that on a PDA (personal digital
assistant, e.g., Palm Pilot) developed at Boston College by Lisa Feldman
Barrett and Daniel Barrett. [added 7/6/06]
Research
design scoring guide - Final
paper scoring rubric - Authentic
Assessment Toolbox - The first link is to a very detailed
scoring guide for the design of research projects. The second link
is to a very detailed rubric for grading the final paper for this
project -- both from Bill Altman. Why do I call the second one a rubric
but not the first? Because the second scoring scale includes the criteria
used to evaluate the student work (as does the first), but it also
articulates levels of performance for each criterion. The inclusion
of criteria and levels of performance are the defining attributes
of a rubric. To learn more about rubrics follow the third link above.
[added 2/22/06]
Group
participation rubric - a very good and detailed rubric for "assessing
group members' ability to participate effectively as part of a team"
- from Bill Altman [added 2/22/06]
Social
influence project - Jean Mandernach asks her students, in groups
of 2 or 3, to design and carry out a series of empirical investigations.
[added 1/15/06]
Conformity
research project - from Bill Altermatt's Social Psychology course
[added 1/15/06]
Ratings
of attractiveness - Ever seen any of those "Am I hot or not"
sites? Here is a long list of them that perhaps you or your students
can use in some project. [added 1/10/06]
Data
collection assignments - Patricia Frazier, in her Psychology of
Women course, assigns her students some interesting data collection
projects including analyzing children's toys and stories, exploring
match-making services, and studying older women. Consent forms and
sample papers for these assignments can be found here.
[added 1/7/06]
Two
class projects - Thomas Morton, in his Social Psychology I course,
asks students to carry out a lab and write it up in which he provides
the background, hypotheses, and materials for a study on rule-breaking
by ingroup members. Secondly, he assigns his students the classic
survival task in which they must decide as a group which items to
keep. Click on the links under Practical 1 and Practical 2 for these
assignments. [added 9/22/05]
Research
materials - The Baumeister/Tice lab shares a few research tools
including ego depletion and social rejection manipulations that could
be used as parts of research projects or other assignments. [added
9/15/05]
Two
linked assignments - Interesting set of group assignments: Michelle
YIK asks students at Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
in an Introduction to Personality and Social Psychology course to
develop a Chinese Personality Questionnaire. The second assignment
asks the groups to design and conduct a helping experiment in which
they try to induce subjects to complete the questionnaire developed
in the first assignment. [added 3/1/05]
SurveyWiz
- This simple-to-use tool by Michael Birnbaum allows you or your students
to create surveys for use on the Web or elsewhere. [added
6/9/04]
Group
Project: Study of Mutual Constitution - In groups, students in Glenn
Adams' Culture and Psychology course conduct research to examine how
some area of psychological functioning (e.g., perception, dating)
and culture are mutually constituted "with the intention of showing
how or why the particular psychological tendency that you have selected
differs from one setting to another." Students write up their
study and orally present their findings to the class. [added
8/30/02]
Replication
Research Project - In Kristi Lemm's Social Cognition course, students
are to "replicate an established effect in social cognition."
With a partner or alone, they collect the data and prepare a poster
to describe the study. [added 8/30/02]
Replicating
Experiments
- Mary Inman assigns students to groups to replicate (and possibly
extend) one of six experiments - she provides detailed and structured
directions - more detailed instructions for each experiment can be
found here:
Research
Paper Grading Rubric
- Jeff Miller teaches a Personality and Social Psychology course among
others, and has posted this generic research paper rubric
Human
Participants Tutorial
- a tutorial from NIH to help researchers "understand how to protect
the rights and welfare of all human participants involved in research."
A good place to start for students who will be designing or conducting
research. Takes about 30-45 minutes to complete. Requires users to
complete a registration form first. A "completion certificate" is
available when the tutorial is finished. Free registration is required.
Designing
Research Only:
Designing
and Conducting Studies:
Other
Paper Assignments 
Reaction papers - Jennifer Spoor has provided a good, detailed assignment for her students on the same page. [added 7/23/08]
Social
identity or hate on the Web - Another good assignment from Nyla
Branscombe's Stereotyping course -- Students choose between 1) writing
about 3 or 4 of their most important identities or 2) analyzing 4
different hate sites on the Web. [added 11/24/07]
Lots
of assignments to accompany Aronson text - Hal Bertilson assigns
over 30 brief assignments to prompt reading and discussion of the
Aronson et al. Social Psychology text. [added
7/8/07]
Analyze
TV and print ads - Nancy White asks students in her Social Psychology
course to "analyze one advertisement each from at least three
television programs and three print publications." [added
7/8/07]
Six
assignments - Students in Dennis Sweeney's Social Psychology course
are required to complete three of the six possible paper topics described
at the page above. Dennis has adapted some of these assignments from
ones found on the Resources website. Now, that's the way to use the
website! Dennis has also written a study guide for the Franzoi (2006)
social psychology text. You can find sections of that guide here.
[added 7/6/07]
Correlation
or Causation? - updated - I have added quite a few more
links to my collection of popular press articles that often include
questionable headlines. I use the links on this page to teach about
the language of correlations versus causal relationships, the type
of research commonly associated with each, and how to evaluate the
quality and quantity of evidence to support such claims. I also have
added an assignments section that includes brief tasks that could
be used as in-class activities or out-of-class assignments. I would
love to hear of any activity/assignment ideas you have or create to
accompany this resource. I will add them to the site. Thanks.
[added
1/1/07]
Theory
critique or analysis paper - Connie Wolfe offers two good final
paper options for her Social Psychology students. These are very detailed
assignments with a lot of guidance and supports for her students.
I also like the "automatic deductions" at the end of the
assignment. [added 1/1/07]
Conformity
and obedience response paper - An assignment from Connie Wolfe,
this one is built around some resources related to the Abu Ghraib
prison incidents. In lieu of the assigned readings, there are plenty
of other related resources that could be used to craft a similar assignment.
[added 1/1/07]
Using
social science in the courtroom - In Valerie Hans' Social Science
and the Law course, she assigns students to "critically examine
the use of social science evidence in a specific court case or line
of cases." [added 1/1/07]
Observing the
criminal justice system - Valerie Hans, in her Problems of the
Criminal Judiciary course, gives her students an opportunity for extra
credit if they conduct an observational study in a courtroom and write
a brief paper about it. [added 1/1/07]
Altruism:
Carnegie Hero Fund - Nora Murphy created this interesting assignment
in which students choose a hero from the Carnegie
Hero Fund site and apply social psychology concepts to the case.
[added 12/19/06]
Two persuasion
assignments - Heather Coon, a colleague of mine, adapted a couple
assignments to create these two good examples in her Persuasion seminar.
In the first
assignment students analyze a set of ads in terms of course concepts.
Heather points them to some good sources of ads online. The second
assignment asks students to design a persuasion campaign for some
social, political, or public service topic. The second assignment
also requires an oral presentation of the campaign. [added
7/6/06]
A
Holocaust Rescuer - Here's an interesting assignment from Chris
Jazwinski's Psychology of Helping and Holocaust Rescue course. Students
research the rescuer and his/her context as well as analyze the "altruistic
motivational base for the rescuer's actions." [added
7/6/06]
Prejudice
|