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PSY
198: Brain, Mind, and Behavior |
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| Course
Goals |
The purpose of this
course is to introduce you to the general subject matter of the field of
biopsychology. As such, it will survey such topics as the following: nervous
system structure and function, neuronal physiology, structure and function
of the sensory and motor systems, and the physiological bases of emotion,
motivation, learning, abnormal, and social behaviors. |
No previous experience
with biology, physiology, or chemistry is required for this class. Critical
approaches to published information are encouraged, and class discussion
is expected. Lecture, readings, demonstrations, experiments, and media
presentations in class will form the basis of the tests. Students are
responsible for all assignments, handouts, and lecture/media materials.
The course
has been submitted to the Educational Policy Committee for approval as
a Natural Science General Education requirement. A natural science course
"develops skills in empirical observation and experimentation, careful
theorizing, and inductive and deductive reasoning" (Wheaton College
1992-1993 Catalog, p.25). And those are among the skills that we will
work on in this course.
These skills
will be achieved through a combination of lectures, videos, readings,
classroom and out-of-the classroom demonstrations and experiments, and
your own research. Specifically, if you make satisfactory progress in
this course, you will:
- have a working
understanding of what biopsychology is
- have a better
understanding of how biology and psychology influence one another
- know how
to construct a research summary
- have a better
understanding of the biological underpinnings of behavior
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Generic
Goals |
As a 100-level
science course in a liberal arts college, this course also has some generic
goals (goals that you should strive to meet as part of your overall education
here at Wheaton). Those goals are as follows: |
- IMPROVING
YOUR COMPUTER LITERACY. You are now living in the 21st century--the
age of technology. That means that you need to be computer-literate:
to know how to use a word processor, a spreadsheet, electronic mail.
One of my objectives in this course is to help you to become familiar
with computer technologies, so that you are ready for the new century!
Improving your computer literacy is
one of the goals of Morgan's PSY 198. Thus you will
be asked to subscribe to a class email list, to check your mail regularly,
to use the class Blackboard site as a resource, to post assignments
using electronic mail or an in-class data entry system, to collect and
analyze data using a spreadsheet (Microsoft Excel) and to write up the
results of your studies using a word processing program (Microsoft Word).
For this
course, you MUST subscribe to the class listserv. The listserv will
be used to post announcements, study guides,news, and other information
relevant to this course. All information
posted to the list is considered valid class material for use in exams
and quizzes. You
can also use the list to have discussions about topics we cover in
class, to ask questions of your classmates, instructor, or TA, or
to form study groups.
You
can subscribe to the class listserv now by clicking on this link..
Leave the subject heading and the body of the message blank.
Then send
the message. You should get a confirmation message back from the listserv
(a listserv is a computer, by the way--not a person!), to which you
MUST reply in order to be subscribed to the list. Follow
the instructions provided by the listserver in order to be subscribed
to the list. Once
subscribed, you need to check your email at least once a day, to look
for announcements, study guides, or other course information. REMEMBER:
Material posted to the list is fair game for testing.
- IMPROVING
YOUR CRITICAL THINKING. As a college graduate, you will be expected
to be a good thinker. Yet rarely in any of your college courses will
you be explicitly offered some help on how to think. Contrary to what
you may believe, good thinking doesn't come naturally! It isn't all
in your genes--it has to be learned. Good thinking is essential for
you to be an effective citizen of this planet, and especially for you
to be an informed consumer of information in the era of hypermedia (and
hype!) An understanding of the nature of science is also necessary in
our technology-rich society. A second
set of goals for this course, then, includes improving your critical
reasoning, introducing you to the epistemology*
of science, and teaching you to be more objective in your considerations
of life around you.
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*epistemology
is the study of knowledge, or the way in which one knows something (back) |