For a summary of the type of work I do
GO TO MY BIO
PAGE (The second half of my bio focuses largely on research).
FOR MORE DETAILS ABOUT WORK CURRENTLY IN PROGRESS,
GO TO
MY WORK IN PROGRESS PAGE PAGE
FOR INSTRUCTIONS REGARDING LETTERS OF RECOMMENDATION
GO TO MY
LETTERS
OF RECOMMENDATION PAGE
Formal Requirements
1. Two-semester commitment. You receive 3 credits per semester,
like a regular class. If this is your first semester of research
with me, you must sign up for one additional semester
(this could be over a summer) of research with me.
You
will automatically receive a grade of
TC (or less) for your first research class, which will be
changed after you complete the paper
required
at the end of second semester.
2. Work. Your eligibility for particular grades depends on: 1) How much you work; and 2) how good your work is. Although the quality of your work is necessarily a subjective judgment, how much you work need not be. In order to keep the subjective aspects of the amount of your work to a minimum, each day you work, you will be required to record your hours on a log in the Social Perception Laboratory (room 301 Tillett).
Your eligibility for certain grades hinges on how much you work each semester:
Grade........Minimum Required Hours
A................130
B+..............120
B................110
C+..............100
C.................90
D.................80
F................<80
Note: These hours are required each semester. You will receive two grades, one for each semester.
Probably the best way to interpret this is as follows: The column in the left provides the highest grade you can possibly receive, given that your amount of work exceeds the number of hours on the column on the right. For example, to be eligible for an A, you must have completed at least 130 hours worth of work that semester. Completing 130 hours does not guarantee an A. In addition, we must judge that your work has been of high quality. However, completing 113 guarantees that you will not get an A and that you will not even get a B+ (the highest possible grade you could receive would be a B). So, if you complete 113 hours, and the quality of your work is very high, you will receive a B; if the quality of your work is not very high, you will receive a grade of C+ or lower.
3. You must be highly dependable and reliable. If you say you are going to do something or be somewhere, it is very important that you do so. Acts of god (e.g., lying unconscious after an accident on the turnpike, your home burns down, etc.) are the only category of acceptable reasons for failing to do so.
4. Final Paper (see below)
For information on current studies being conducted in the Social
Perception
Lab, go to my
Work in
Progress page.
Your Role You will get more information on these studies
later.
Your role may involve reading and reporting on psychology research
articles,
interviewing, running experimental sessions, and/or coding and
analyzing
data -- not to mention a final paper required at the end of the second
semester. You will undoubtedly have to learn a little about
IBM-compatible
personal computers (PCs). You may have to learn quite a lot. But do not
worry if you are not familiar with computers, or even if you are a
little
computer phobic. We will get you started.
This paper should total around ten pages and be in two parts.
Part I (of paper)
The first part should be a formal description of the research project
you were involved with and should be about 6-7 pages long. This first
part
should approximately follow American Psychological Association
standards
for a research paper. First, there should be an
introduction presenting
general theoretical background and then the hypotheses. Second, there
should
be a methods section describing exactly how the experiment was
conducted
(pilot-testing, pre-testing, procedures, materials, confederates,
questionnaires,
etc.).
Third, there should be results section. This section describes exactly how the experiment "came out" -- how the independent variables influenced the dependent variables; group differences, control conditions vs. experimental conditions, correlations among variables, etc. Not all of these types of results are relevant to any particular study, but you should report all those that are relevant to the study you worked on. If results were not yet obtained, describe in detail how you think the results are likely to come out.
Fourth, there should be a discussion section. In this section you discuss how the research you worked on relates to broader issues in social psychology, to psychology in general, and its relevance (or lack of it) to "real life." Also discuss some ideas for following up the study you worked on -- i.e., based on what is or might be discovered by the study you worked on, what should be the next thing we should research?
Part II (of paper) The second part of the paper should be a more informal description of your experiences in this project (about 4-5 pages). What did you learn from your participation? What did you get out of it? Which parts did you enjoy and which were annoying pains in the neck? How could the study be improved? Feel free to criticize (and compliment) any aspect of the study itself, how it was done, and your relationships with any of the other people in the study, including other undergrads, grad students and me.
Alternative Paper If you are the primary author of a paper
that
is accepted for presentation at a professional conference (e.g.,
American
Psychological Association), that will count as Part I of your paper.
Even
if you are not primary author, if I judge that the paper is
sufficiently
difficult and sophisticated, and your contribution significant, you may
get Part I of the paper waived.
BUT EVERYONE STILL HAS TO DO PART II.
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