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Showing 1 to 15 of 32 results
Hartley, James – Psychology Teaching Review, 2012
There have been great changes in the numbers of students studying psychology at degree level in the UK since 1961--the year the author graduated. And, similarly there have been great changes in what is taught--with an ever-widening set of theoretical developments and practical applications. Nonetheless, despite these developments, the author…
Descriptors: Psychology, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Higher Education
Eysenck, Michael W. – Psychology Teaching Review, 2012
In his article, "Reflections on 50 years of teaching psychology", James Hartley concludes that the teaching of psychology has changed relatively little over the past several decades. As someone whose teaching career covered a very similar time period, I agree in general terms with that assessment. In this article, however, I focus on some of the…
Descriptors: Psychology, Teaching Methods, Reflective Teaching, Higher Education
Entwistle, Noel – Psychology Teaching Review, 2012
In this article, the author shares his response to James Hartley's "Reflections on 50 years of teaching psychology". The author finds it very interesting to read James Hartley's reflections on the teaching of psychology and he thought it would be worth adding a rather different perspective, while agreeing with Hartley's main conclusions about the…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Psychologists, Psychology, Teaching Methods
Sternberg, Robert J. – Psychology Teaching Review, 2012
In this article, the author shares his response to James Hartley's "Reflections on 50 years of teaching psychology". Hartley concludes that the teaching of psychology has changed relatively little over the past several decades. The author states that his way of teaching now is very different from his way of 1975. This essay is about the…
Descriptors: Psychology, Feedback (Response), Teaching Methods, Higher Education
Knapper, Christopher – Psychology Teaching Review, 2012
In his article, "Reflections on 50 years of teaching psychology", James Hartley concludes that the teaching of psychology has changed relatively little over the past several decades. Hartley begins his paper on a personal note with recollections of his first university teaching experience at Keele University. In his paper Hartley comments on the…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Educational Research, Educational Technology, Psychology
Jones, Tim – Psychology Teaching Review, 2012
In responding to Hartley (2011), this paper considers his concluding remarks as recommendations for the future of teaching undergraduate psychology and challenges the position that the teaching of psychology hasn't altered vastly during the last 50 years. In doing so, it is acknowledged that the content and delivery of higher education psychology…
Descriptors: Psychology, Teaching Methods, Undergraduate Students, Student Motivation
Radford, John – Psychology Teaching Review, 2012
In responding to Jim Hartley, with whom I very largely agree, I first reflect on my own experience of teaching Psychology in an institution which was successively college of technology, polytechnic and university. In the second a new and fruitful method of assessing higher education essentially by peer review was developed, only to be destroyed in…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Psychology, Teaching Methods, College Science
Hartley, James – Psychology Teaching Review, 2012
This article presents the author's response to peer commentary on his article entitled "Reflections on 50 years of teaching psychology." The author is pleased that most of them share some of his concerns about the lack of progress in the teaching of psychology over the last 50 years, and he welcomes the fact that they then go on to raise…
Descriptors: Information Technology, Psychology, Reflective Teaching, Teaching Methods
Ravenscroft, Lesley – Psychology Teaching Review, 2012
This paper presents some possibilities for applying the linguistic and psychological theories of two dialogists, Mikhail Bakhtin and Jacques Lacan, to the classroom. There is a short summary of how the two theories may interact with each other and then a discussion of their two opposing views of identity formation. Bakhtin was a Russian, coming…
Descriptors: Models, Educational Change, Psychology, Foreign Countries
Heggs, Daniel A.; Mercer, Jenny M.; Durniat, Kasia – Psychology Teaching Review, 2011
In this article, the authors offer an account of a free-ranging discussion highlighting common features of psychology provision and that considers the differences between two departments and two distinct programmes. The discussion took place between ERASMUS partners during a Teacher Exchange visit to the University of Wroclaw, Poland, in March…
Descriptors: Institutions, Academic Standards, Foreign Countries, Psychology
Richardson, John T. E. – Psychology Teaching Review, 2010
The participation of people from ethnic minorities in UK higher education is greater than that of White people. Nevertheless, students from ethnic minorities are less likely to obtain "good" degrees (those awarded with first or upper second-class honours) than are White students. This article discusses some possible causes and implications of this…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Open Universities, Distance Education, Psychology
Betts, Lucy R.; Cross, Amanda – Psychology Teaching Review, 2010
While there are a number of technologies that have been used, with varying levels of success, to support visually impaired students, the purpose of this article is to reflect upon the authors' experiences of supporting a visually impaired student through a nine-month level two undergraduate biological psychology module. The authors developed a…
Descriptors: Visual Impairments, Psychology, Teaching Methods, Special Needs Students
Sander, Paul; Williamson, Stella – Psychology Teaching Review, 2010
In this contribution to the Widening Participation Special Issue of Psychology Teaching Review we consider our experiences in education as people who can't spell using an auto-ethnographic methodology (Sparkes, 2007), specifically, evocative auto-ethnography (Anderson, 2006) and guided by a social constructionist approach to identity (Burr, 1995).…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Spelling, Ability, Low Achievement
Hollin, Gregory J. S.; Hollin, Clive R. – Psychology Teaching Review, 2009
John Radford's original article (Radford, 2008a) asked some hard questions about the content and purpose of a degree in psychology. The original article prompted a number of replies and a rejoinder from Radford (2008b). In the spirit of carrying on the discussion started by Radford and others, this article offers two personal perspectives on our…
Descriptors: Psychology, Foreign Countries, Psychological Studies, Educational Principles
Radford, John – Psychology Teaching Review, 2009
In this article, the author gives an autobiographical account of his learning experiences and the lessons he learned from his lecturers. The author learned what he subsequently found is supported by experience and research, that the informal is as necessary as the formal. He also learned that teachers and students need to interact spontaneously,…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Learning Experience, Lecture Method, Teacher Student Relationship

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