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E-raamat: Handbook of Demonstrations and Activities in the Teaching of Psychology: Volume III: Personality, Abnormal, Clinical-Counseling, and Social 2nd edition [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

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For those who teach students in psychology, education, and the social sciences, the Handbook of Demonstrations and Activities in the Teaching of Psychology, Second Edition provides practical applications and rich sources of ideas. Revised to include a wealth of new material (56% of the articles are new), these invaluable reference books contain the collective experience of teachers who have successfully dealt with students' difficulty in mastering important concepts about human behavior. Each volume features a table that lists the articles and identifies the primary and secondary courses in which readers can use each demonstration. Additionally, the subject index facilitates retrieval of articles according to topical headings, and the appendix notes the source as it originally appeared in Teaching of Psychology--especially useful for users needing to cite information. The official journal of the Society for the Teaching of Psychology, Division Two of the American Psychological Association, Teaching of Psychology is a highly respected publication devoted to improving teaching and learning at all educational levels.

Volume III consists of 95 articles about teaching personality, abnormal, clinical-counseling, and social psychology. Divided into four sections (one for each specialty), the book suggests ways to work with case studies, advocate a research perspective, use the arts and literature as teaching tools, and otherwise facilitate understanding of theoretical concepts.


For those who teach students in psychology, education, and the social sciences, the Handbook of Demonstrations and Activities in the Teaching of Psychology, Second Edition provides practical applications and rich sources of ideas. Revised to include a wealth of new material (56% of the articles are new), these invaluable reference books contain the collective experience of teachers who have successfully dealt with students' difficulty in mastering important concepts about human behavior. Each volume features a table that lists the articles and identifies the primary and secondary courses in which readers can use each demonstration. Additionally, the subject index facilitates retrieval of articles according to topical headings, and the appendix notes the source as it originally appeared in Teaching of Psychology--especially useful for users needing to cite information. The official journal of the Society for the Teaching of Psychology, Division Two of the American Psychological Association, Teaching of Psychology is a highly respected publication devoted to improving teaching and learning at all educational levels.

Volume III consists of 95 articles about teaching personality, abnormal, clinical-counseling, and social psychology. Divided into four sections (one for each specialty), the book suggests ways to work with case studies, advocate a research perspective, use the arts and literature as teaching tools, and otherwise facilitate understanding of theoretical concepts.
Preface ix Section I: Personality Discovering Students Perspectives Making implicit personality theories explicit: A classroom demonstration. 5(3) Alvin Y. Wang An exercise for explicating and critiquing students implicit personality theories. 8(4) Dana D. Anderson Paul Rosenfeld Lori Cruikshank Implicit personality theory in the classroom: An integrative approach. 12(3) Marlowe C. Embree Identifying imagoes: A personality exercise on myth, self, and identity. 15(2) Dana S. Dunn Teaching personality: Discovering the difference between self and personality. 17(4) Jay Einhorn Exploring Theories Freudian principles in everyday life. 21(3) Marianne Miserandio A Freudian slip? 24(1) Gordon Bear Psychosexual pursuit: Enhancing learning of theoretical psychoanalytic constructs. 25(3) Janet F. Carlson Abstract and relational thinking via personal constructs. 28(1) Mitchell M. Handelsman Students peak experiences: A written exercise. 29(2) James Polyson Using a film as a personality case study. 31(4) Richard D. Logan Emphasizing Writing Persons in the personality theory course: Student papers based on biographies. 35(4) Susan C. Mueller From Metropolis to Never-neverland: Analyzing fictional characters in a personality theory course. 39(2) Janet F. Carlson Questioning and peer collaboration as techniques for thinking and writing about personality. 41(8) Susan E. Beers Section II: Abnormal Teaching with Simulations Using computerized case simulations in undergraduate psychology courses. 49(3) Matthew E. Lambert Gerard Lenthall Creating the multiple personality: An experiential demonstration for an undergraduate abnormal psychology class. 52(3) Fredric E. Rabinowitz The disordered monologue: A classroom demonstration of the symptoms of schizophrenia. 55(6) Timothy M. Osberg Teaching with Case-Studies Students evaluation of writing assignments in an abnormal psychology course. 61(3) Mary E. Procidano A case-study assignment to teach theoretical perspectives in abnormal psychology. 64(5) David V. Perkins Teaching Abnormal Psychology Through the Arts and Literature Novels as case-study materials for psychology students. 69(2) Joan C. Chrisler Questioning the conventional wisdom and critiquing unconventional perspectives in abnormal psychology: A written exercise. 71(2) Dana D. Anderson Exploring mental illness through a poetry-writing assignment. 73(2) Joan C. Chrisler Images of madness: Feature films in teaching psychology. 75(6) Michael Z. Fleming Ralph L. Piedmont C. Michael Hiam Examining Miscellaneous Issues A volunteer program for abnormal psychology students: Eighteen years and still going strong. 81(3) Forrest Scogin Henry C. Rickard Integrating suicidology into abnormal psychology classes: The revised facts on suicide quiz. 84(3) Richard W. Hubbard John L. Mclntosh Jeopardy© in abnormal psychology. 87(2) Carolin S. Keutzer Integrating disability awareness into psychology courses: Applications in abnormal psychology and perception. 89(3) Stephen A. Wurst Karen Wolford Beyond the sponge model: Encouraging students questioning skills in abnormal psychology. 92(11) Stuart M. Keeley Rahan Ali Tracey Gebing Section III: Clinical-Counseling Learning Concepts and Principles Teaching psychological defenses: An interactive computerized program. 103(3) Robert Bibace David Marcus Debra Thomason E. Anne Litt Earliest recollections and birth order: Two Adlerian exercises. 106(5) Les Parrott Acquiring Skills - Undergraduate Students Using actors as ``clients for an interviewing simulation in an undergraduate clinical psychology course. 111(2) Kristi Lane The interviewing team: An exercise for teaching assessment and conceptualization skills. 113(212) Bernard J. Balleweg Computer-simulated psychotherapy as an aid in teaching clinical psychology. 116(2) John R. Suler Teaching students to listen empathically. 118(4) Peter S. Fernald Using a group workshop to encourage collaborative learning in an undergraduate counseling course. 122(5) Gary S. Goldstein Acquiring Skills - Graduate Students The hypothesis-testing game: A training tool for the graduate interviewing skills course. 127(2) Kathryn M. Rickard Robert W. Titley Thou shalt not ask questions: An approach to teaching interviewing skills. 129(3) John C. Sommers-Flanagan John R. Means Undergraduate role players as ``clients for graduate counseling students. 132(3) Dana D. Anderson Colleen Buren Gundersen Daniel M. Banken Jonathan V. Halvorson Denise Schmutte Teaching counseling and psychotherapy skills without access to a clinical population: The short interview method. 135(6) Andrea R. Weiss Treating Fears Participant modeling as a classroom activity. 141(2) Dolores Hughes A humorous demonstration of in vivo systematic desensitization: The case of eraser phobia. 143(6) Timothy J. Lawson Michael Reardon Advocating a Research Perspective Teaching psychotherapy outcome research methodology using a research-based checklist. 149(3) Timothy M. Osberg Therapy evaluation: Using an absurd pseudotreatment to demonstrate research issues. 152(11) Richard J. Viken Section IV: Social Focusing on Experimentation Content analysis project for research novices. 163(2) Sandra Carpenter A scheme and variations for studies of social influence in an experimental social psychology laboratory. 165(3) Neil Lutsky Performing experiments in undergraduate social psychology classes. 168(2) Daniel L. Wann The warm-cold study: A classroom demonstration of impression formation. 170(2) Diane G. Symbaluk Judy Cameron An exit survey project for a social psychology laboratory. 172(5) David N. Sattler Sudie Back Harriet Pollitt Emphasizing Writing in Social Psychology Writing as a tool for teaching social psychology. 177(3) Sara E. Snodgrass Self-knowledge as an outcome of application journal keeping in social psychology. 180(2) Stuart Miller Samuel Butlers Erewhon as social psychology. 182(7) Don R. Osborn Illustrating Concepts in Social Perception and Social Congnition Teaching scientific reasoning through attribution theory. 189(4) Juli T. Eflin Mary E. Kite A classroom demonstration of the primacy effect in the attribution of ability. 193(3) Francis T. McAndrew Teaching attribution theory with a videotaped illustration. 196(2) Michael J. White Debra L. Lilly The self-reference effect: Demonstrating schematic processing in the classroom. 198(2) Donelson R. Forsyth Katherine Hsu Wibberly A classroom demonstration of Nuttins (1985) ownership effect: The letters of my own first name. 200(2) Su L. Boatright-Horowitz Can you predict the overjustification effect? 202(2) Harry L. Hom, Jr. A classroom exercise in impression formation. 204(2) Joy L. Berrenberg Using students perceptions of their instructor to illustrate principles of person perception. 206(5) Robin L. Lashley Demonstrating Bias in Social Perception and Social Cognition Observer biases in the classroom. 211(4) Mary E. Kite Social desirability bias: A demonstration and technique for its reduction. 215(2) Randall A. Gordon Hindsight bias and the Simpson trial: Use in introductory psychology. 217(2) George J. Demakis Unique invulnerability: A classroom demonstration in estimating personal mortality. 219(2) C. R. Snyder Demonstrating a self-serving bais. 221(2) Dana S. Dunn On seeing oneself as less self-serving than others: The ultimate self-serving bias? 223(6) James Friedrich Teaching about Attitudes and Persuasion Bringing cognitive dissonance to the classroom. 229(2) David M. Carkenord Joseph Bullington Identifying major techniques of persuasion. 231(2) Vivian Parker Makosky From acceptance to rejection: Food contamination in the classroom. 233(6) D. W. Rajecki Exploring about Aggression Defining aggression: An exercise for classroom discussion. 239(2) Ludy T. Benjamin, Jr. Perspectives on human aggression: Writing to Einstein and Freud on ``Why War?. 241(2) Dana S. Dunn The dirty dozen: Classroom demonstration of twelve instigators of aggression. 243(1) William B. Davidson A gender difference in acceptance of sport aggression: A classroom activity. 244(5) David W. Rainey Examining Group Processes Learning about individual and collective decisions: All for one and none for all. 249(4) Blaine F. Peden Allen H. Keniston David T. Burke Prisoners dilemma as a model for understanding decisions. 253(2) Janet D. Larsen Demonstrating dynamic social impact: Consolidation, clustering, correlation, and (sometimes) the correct answer. 255(4) Helen C. Harton Laura R. Green Craig Jackson Bibb Latane Studying a social norm. 259(6) Marianne Miserandino Teaching about Spatial and Nonverbal Behavior Intimacy and personal space: A classroom demonstration. 265(2) Bryan Gibson Paul Harris Carol Wener Field experiments in personal spcae invasion for intriductory psychology. 267(1) F. Richard Ferraro Detecting deception: A classroom demonstration. 268(3) James W. Grosch John E. Sparrow Detecting deception is not as wasy as it looks. 271(2) Donna M. Desforges Thomas C. Lee A method for teaching about verbal and nonverbal communication. 273(6) Mark A. Costanzo Dane Archer Examining Sterotypes of Gender and Race Stereotype measurement and the ``kernel of truth hypothesis. 279(2) Randall A. Gordon The power of stereotypes: A labeling exercise. 281(3) Susan B. Goldstein Using science fiction to teach the psychology of sex and gender. 284(2) Hilary M. Lips Gender sterotyping in advertisements. 286(2) Melinda Jones Rethinking the romance: Teaching the content and function of gender stereotypes in the psychology of women course. 288(3) Mary Crawford Gender bias in leader selection. 291(3) Michelle R. Hebl Filmed in Black and White: Teaching the concept of racial identity at a predominantly White university. 294(3) Harriette W. Richard Unveiling positions of privilege: A hands-on approach to understanding racism. 297(3) Sandra M. Lawrence Teaching about unintentional racism in introductory psychology. 300(5) Thomas E. Ford Robert W. Grossman Elizabeth A. Jordan Integrating Social Psychology and Personality Linking dispositions and social behavior: Self-monitoring and advertising preferences. 305(2) Melinda Jones Forming and testing implicit personality theories in cyberspace. 307(5) Miri D. Goldstein Self-monitoring and commitment to dating relationships: A classroom demonstration. 312(5) Jeffry A. Simpson Examining Miscellaneous Issues Using the World Wide Web to teach everyday applications of social psychology. 317(5) Richard C. Sherman Robbers in the classroom: A deindividuation exercixse. 322(3) David K. Dodd Table 325(4) Appendix 329(2) Subject Index 331
Mark E. Ware, David E. Johnson