Psychology and Psychology (Applied)
Psychology is the study of people:
how they think, how they act, react and interact. This subject is concerned
with all aspects of behaviour and the thoughts, feelings and motivations
underlying such behaviour.
In a sense, many of us are already
psychologists. We are interested in what makes people tick and have our own
theories about why people behave in the ways that they do. Psychology as
a science aims to give a clearer picture using tests and
assessments of behaviour and that is why you will learn how to use scientific
methods and statistics when you study psychology.
We have two Psychology degrees:
Psychology and Psychology (Applied). The difference between the degrees is one
of emphasis. While both degrees will look at explanations for people's
behaviour, Psychology (Applied) is particularly concerned with psychology's
relevance to a range of everyday issues such as health, education, technology,
and neuropsychological rehabilitation. If you want a degree course that
explains behaviour in the context of real life, then this is the course for
you.
General Psychology is where you learn about the facets of the mind, various theories
which have shaped the course of psychology, personality, memory, learning,
cognition.. so on and so forth.
Applied Psychology is a specialised stream of the field where one learns to put the
theories and principles of psychology to practical and tangible use in
the everyday world.
Some of the common branches where psychologists heavily emphasize applied
psychology are Counselling, Child Psychology, Clinical Psychology, Sports
Psychology, Industrial and Organisational Psychology etc.
Are you interested in pursuing a career in
a research branch of psychology, but cannot, for the life of you figure out the
difference between research psychology and applied psychology? If so, you have come to the right place. To answer
your question, in its simplest form, research
psychology involves actual
experimentation. In other words, a research psychologist conducts research
studies with participants (i.e. testing how quickly toddlers learn to walk,
examining how traumatic brain injury patients process information, etc.). These
psychologists are “field psychologists,” which means they work in the field
with people (i.e. volunteers and participants).
Applied Psychology (Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human
Development)
The major difference? It’s in the
name! The program in Steinhardt is more applied than the program in CAS. The
Applied Psychology Department in Steinhardt really prepares students to work
with specific populations of individuals, while keeping an eye to psychological
theory and our developing multicultural world. While the curriculum includes
introductory courses to learn about different facets of psychology, including
research, applications, and counseling, the programs also has fieldwork
seamlessly built-in to the curriculum, giving students hands-on experience in
working with diverse populations around New York City. Students work directly
with a faculty member and individuals in schools, youth centers, hospitals,
social service agencies, and clinics or can fulfill their fieldwork requirement
by working with faculty members on research.
Undergraduate classes are listed here.
The Applied Psychology program also
offers the unique opportunity to join studies in Applied Psychology with Global
Public Health. The program focuses on developing an understanding of psychology
across contexts and cultures. The fieldwork component focuses on joining the
two together and the program also requires that students study away for at
least a semester at one of our global academic centers.
At the end of the program, students obtain either a Bachelor of Science
in Applied Psychology or a Bachelor of Science in Global Public Health/Applied
Psychology. After completing the degree in Applied Psychology, students can go
on to a variety of fields, just like the program within the College of Arts and
Science. Most students go on to graduate work in areas like Counseling, Social
Work, Clinical Psychology, and other forms of Therapy (e.g. Art, Music, Drama).
In Conclusion
So which one is right for you? That depends! It is really important to
look closely at the curricula for both programs to determine which one is the
right fit for your goals within psychology. For me, that was the program within
the College of Arts and Science, because I wasn’t quite sure where I wanted to
go with my studies in psychology. The breadth of the program allowed me to explore
different areas like research, marketing, and clinical psychology. If you want
to be actively engaged in fieldwork, however, Applied Psychology might be the
better fit for you.
Now you know the basics and can make an informed decision about which program
is best for you!
Four
Essential Keys to Successful Teaching
As a teacher for the past 20+ years, I’ve come to develop a pretty
clearly defined philosophy of teaching. I think my teaching is pretty
principled (meaning that it is based on a set of specific principles), and on
occasion, a student (or alumnus) will come up to me to let me know that
whatever I did worked. Of course, this means a ton to me.
I recently had an alumna email me with a note saying that I inspired her
during her time as a college student here—during a particular period in her
academic career that was pretty rocky. Reading what she said now
got me thinking: What exactly did I do to help inspire this bright, hard-working,
incredible young person who, to my good fortune, ended up in my classes?
Partly, I think I let her know that I thought she was bright and hard-working.
Perhaps that’s a key to helping motivate people to achieve their best.
Student Success: The Currency of Teaching
As an educator, helping others succeed is my primary job. How do I
succeed as a teacher? Well I see success in my students’ academic development,
that’s how. If I teach a difficult class and give a high-level exam and 90% of
the students work really hard and ace the exam, showing that they fully get the
material that we’ve gone over, then I feel pretty successful (although I do
worry about the other 10%). If I teach a graduate student how to design a
survey and conduct advanced statistical methods—and then come to find that same
student is effectively conducting his or her own statistics for his or her
master’s thesis?! ... And beyond that, I come to see this same student tapped
as a resource by other students when it comes to information about statistics?!
Yeah, that’s success—and that makes me proud. I thrive on student success in
all capacities. That’s the currency that underlies my work. My students'
success = my success.
Based on my decades of teaching at the college level, here are some of
the secrets of the trade—tools to helping cultivate success in our students:
1. Put your students on equal footing as
yourself. Intimidation
is not a great tool in cultivating success. Having students see you as some
really important, special person who has access to some kind of secret
knowledge?! No need. In ancestral conditions, people learned most of the
information they ever got from peers (see Gray, 2011). Steps that some teachers
take to build a wall between little old student and powerful,
omniscient teacher are steps that get immediately in the way of
effective teaching.
2. Truly believe in your students—and let
them know that you believe in them! A core step in succeeding at some
task is the development of self-efficacy (see Bandura et al., 1996), the
belief that you can actually do some task. If you don’t think the task is
within your grasp, then guess what? You’re probably going to fail even if you
are absolutely brilliant in all regards. Actually believing in your students’
capacity for success builds in beneficial expectation effects that can help
foster success. And, related, getting your students themselves to believe the
same about themselves—well that’s
literally the key. If there is a secret to success as a
teacher, it is that. Get your
students to believe that they can handle the work and they will rise to the
occasion.
3. At all times, remember that your
students are 100% human. So if a student fails an exam, forgets to hand in a paper,
says something obnoxious in class (this does happen from time to time), etc.,
remember that how you deal with it is up to you. If you deal with such
transgressions by getting the student to feel ashamed, you run the risk of
crushing his or her spirit. If you take a fully human approach to dealing with
the problem, then there is still a chance that you’ve got the capacity to help
educate this person successfully. And never forget, that is your job! I’m not
by any means saying “give extra points to be nice” or to provide “newly created
extra-credit assignments” when students mess up. I’ve never done either of
those and, in fact, I don’t suggest that anyone ever does. Rather, when a
student messes up, think about the fact that you’ve messed up yourself
thousands of times in your own life (it’s just got to be true!)—and think about
how at times, you could have been built up rather than torn down after
failures. A splash of empathy goes a long
way. Then
go ahead and help build that student up.
4. Be there for your
students—literally. If you’re a teacher at any level, you have tons of
obligations. It may be hard to make individual time for any particular student.
But you know what, from the perspective of each and every one of your students,
each is a person just like you are—and you have the potential to leave a
positive mark on the future of each one. At work, I tend to sign dozens of
forms a day, I have lots of meetings with deans, other professors, who knows
who, etc. And more. But I’ll tell you this, when a student stops by the office,
it’s pretty rare that I don’t drop everything and say “what can I do to help you?”
I’m not perfect at this by any means, but I do have a guiding principle in
dealing with students—and that principle simply is this: “Students come first.”
Students are the reason that I am fortunate to have this pretty-cool job in the
first place. Being welcoming and helpful to each and every student is a goal
that I strive for every day—it has the capacity to help students feel
empowered—and having your students feel empowered is a critical step toward
their success.
If you are a teacher (in either a formal or an informal sense), then
cultivating student success along a variety of dimensions is the core
outcome that defines your own success. It’s an amazing field to be in. I’d way
rather be working all day to help bright young people come to believe in
themselves and succeed than just about anything else.
If you’re a teacher, I suggest that you take a look at your own guiding
principles—lay them out—and think about how each such principle has the
capacity to facilitate successful learning on the part of your students. At the
end of the day (literally), if you can think of even one instance in which your
work helped build up a student and succeed in some academic outcome, you’ve had
a good day at work.
References
Bandura, A.; Barbaranelli, C.; Caprara, G. V.; Pastorelli, C. (1996).
Multifaceted Impact of Self-Efficacy Beliefs on Academic Functioning. Child Development, 67, 1206–1222.
Gray, P. (2011). Free to Learn. New York: Basic Books.
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