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Geiss, Paul Georg – Psychology Teaching Review, 2019
Psychological literacy has become a key concept for the teaching and learning of psychology in higher education and is a laudable goal of pre-tertiary psychology education. The widely used definition of McGovern and his colleagues enables a subject-specific contribution to liberal education. Nevertheless, this definition also includes general…
Descriptors: Psychology, Knowledge Level, Higher Education, Secondary Education
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Robbins, A.; Kaye, E.; Catling, J. C. – Psychology Teaching Review, 2018
Resilience, when coping with stress, can protect against serious negative life outcomes and lead to greater lifetime satisfaction. The current literature suggests that there are internal factors that may moderate the development of resilience. These factors could be used to inform targeted interventions for young people experiencing stress within…
Descriptors: Predictor Variables, Resilience (Psychology), Higher Education, Coping
Hulme, Julie; Taylor, Jacqui; Davies, Mark N. O.; Banister, Peter – Psychology Teaching Review, 2012
The Higher Education Academy (HEA) is committed to enhancing the quality of learning and teaching for all university students in the UK, and the inaugural conference for the Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) subjects, held in April 2012 at Imperial College, London, aimed to showcase research and evidence-based educational…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Learner Engagement, Evidence, Foreign Countries
Betts, Lucy R.; Bostock, Stephen J.; Elder, Tracey J.; Trueman, Mark – Psychology Teaching Review, 2012
There is growing concern among many regarding plagiarism within student writing. This has promoted investigation into both the factors that predict plagiarism and potential methods of reducing plagiarism. Consequently, we developed and evaluated an intervention to enhance good practice within academic writing through the use of the plagiarism…
Descriptors: Cheating, Intervention, Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition)
Emerson, Anne; Williams, Gareth J. – Psychology Teaching Review, 2012
A series of tutorials was re-designed to further engage students in spiral learning and highlight development of transferable skills. The tutorials focused on self-directed and enquiry-based learning, both of which provided particular challenges to students and staff. The students were randomly allocated a media article related to psychology as a…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Peer Evaluation, Undergraduate Students, College Students
Swenson, John Eric, III; Schneller, Gregory R. – Psychology Teaching Review, 2011
Students from four sections of Introduction to Psychology (N=82) were taught that participating in a classroom exercise may make memories vulnerable to the misinformation effect. All students were shown a short video clip of a car wreck. Students were then asked either "leading" or "non-leading" questions about the video clip. Students were also…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Psychology, Memory, Introductory Courses
Knight, Simon; Vainre, Maris – Psychology Teaching Review, 2011
Without understanding career options, and pre-requisites around Europe, it is not clear what the implications are of the Bologna Process for the creation of a "European Higher Education Area" for psychology, and more specifically the basis for the Psychology Diploma for practitioner qualification (Lunt, 2005). However, any research into…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Career Education, Foreign Countries, Psychology
Mercer, Jenny – Psychology Teaching Review, 2010
Evidence indicates that non-traditional adult returners describe returning to education as a period of self-development and growth. However, lifespan psychology perspectives also show that successful growth and change involves periods of conflict. This paper will explore both the nature of self-development and conflicts experienced by a sample of…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Higher Education, Student Attitudes, Failure
Reddy, Peter A.; Moores, Elisabeth – Psychology Teaching Review, 2008
Universities are encouraged to widen access to a broad range of applicants, including mature students taking Access qualifications. Admissions tutors can find it difficult to compare and choose between Access and A-level applications, and Access applicants for popular courses may be disadvantaged relative to students with good A-levels. In this…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Access to Education, Higher Education, Case Studies
Sutton, Pamela; Henry, Ann – Psychology Teaching Review, 2005
The research literature documents the different approaches to learning that students in Higher Education (HE) can adopt, e.g. deep, surface and strategic. Stage 1 of a longitudinal study aimed to determine the students' approach to learning, and to assess whether this was related to previous learning experiences, initial expectations of HE and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Educational Strategies, College Students
Richardson, John T. E. – Psychology Teaching Review, 2005
Roughly 20 per cent of all students in higher education have sustained clinically significant head injuries during childhood or adolescence. Although these injuries typically do not seem to lead to any long-term intellectual deficits, little is known about their possible impact upon the students' academic attainment. Nevertheless, many…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Head Injuries, Psychology, College Students