CLASS INFORMATION. Graduate TA: Brendan Barstow Office: 727 LRDC Office Hours: Tues. 2:00-4:00pm, or by appointment

Similar documents
Accounting 312: Fundamentals of Managerial Accounting Syllabus Spring Brown

INTERMEDIATE ALGEBRA Course Syllabus

State University of New York at Buffalo INTRODUCTION TO STATISTICS PSC 408 Fall 2015 M,W,F 1-1:50 NSC 210

FINN FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Spring 2014

Office Hours: Mon & Fri 10:00-12:00. Course Description

Physics Experimental Physics II: Electricity and Magnetism Prof. Eno Spring 2017

Financial Accounting Concepts and Research

Spring 2015 Natural Science I: Quarks to Cosmos CORE-UA 209. SYLLABUS and COURSE INFORMATION.

San José State University

Syllabus: CS 377 Communication and Ethical Issues in Computing 3 Credit Hours Prerequisite: CS 251, Data Structures Fall 2015

Course Description. Student Learning Outcomes

San José State University Department of Psychology PSYC , Human Learning, Spring 2017

Religion in Asia (Rel 2315; Sections 023A; 023B; 023C) Monday/Wednesday, Period 5 (11:45 12:35), Matherly 18 Section Meetings on Friday

*In Ancient Greek: *In English: micro = small macro = large economia = management of the household or family

HCI 440: Introduction to User-Centered Design Winter Instructor Ugochi Acholonu, Ph.D. College of Computing & Digital Media, DePaul University

Monday/Wednesday, 9:00 AM 10:30 AM

University of Pittsburgh Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures. Russian 0015: Russian for Heritage Learners 2 MoWe 3:00PM - 4:15PM G13 CL

MTH 141 Calculus 1 Syllabus Spring 2017

Accounting 380K.6 Accounting and Control in Nonprofit Organizations (#02705) Spring 2013 Professors Michael H. Granof and Gretchen Charrier

Class Meeting Time and Place: Section 3: MTWF10:00-10:50 TILT 221

IST 440, Section 004: Technology Integration and Problem-Solving Spring 2017 Mon, Wed, & Fri 12:20-1:10pm Room IST 202

An unexamined life is not worth living -Socrates

Nutrition 10 Contemporary Nutrition WINTER 2016

STA2023 Introduction to Statistics (Hybrid) Spring 2013

An unexamined life is not worth living -Socrates

Class meetings: Time: Monday & Wednesday 7:00 PM to 8:20 PM Place: TCC NTAB 2222

CALCULUS III MATH

PHY2048 Syllabus - Physics with Calculus 1 Fall 2014

PSYCHOLOGY 353: SOCIAL AND PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT IN CHILDREN SPRING 2006

Class Numbers: & Personal Financial Management. Sections: RVCC & RVDC. Summer 2008 FIN Fully Online

MATH 205: Mathematics for K 8 Teachers: Number and Operations Western Kentucky University Spring 2017

MAT 122 Intermediate Algebra Syllabus Summer 2016

Aerospace Engineering

COURSE WEBSITE:

THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY Semester 2, Information Sheet for MATH2068/2988 Number Theory and Cryptography

Stochastic Calculus for Finance I (46-944) Spring 2008 Syllabus

Biology 10 - Introduction to the Principles of Biology Spring 2017

Physics XL 6B Reg# # Units: 5. Office Hour: Tuesday 5 pm to 7:30 pm; Wednesday 5 pm to 6:15 pm

SYLLABUS. EC 322 Intermediate Macroeconomics Fall 2012

EDU 614: Advanced Educational Psychology Online Course Dr. Jim McDonald

MKT ADVERTISING. Fall 2016

Syllabus - ESET 369 Embedded Systems Software, Fall 2016

ASTRONOMY 2801A: Stars, Galaxies & Cosmology : Fall term

MTH 215: Introduction to Linear Algebra

Foothill College Summer 2016

GENERAL CHEMISTRY I, CHEM 1100 SPRING 2014

CIS Introduction to Digital Forensics 12:30pm--1:50pm, Tuesday/Thursday, SERC 206, Fall 2015

BIOH : Principles of Medical Physiology

MATH 1A: Calculus I Sec 01 Winter 2017 Room E31 MTWThF 8:30-9:20AM

ECON492 Senior Capstone Seminar: Cost-Benefit and Local Economic Policy Analysis Fall 2017 Instructor: Dr. Anita Alves Pena

Soil & Water Conservation & Management Soil 4308/7308 Course Syllabus: Spring 2008

Military Science 101, Sections 001, 002, 003, 004 Fall 2014

CRITICAL THINKING AND WRITING: ENG 200H-D01 - Spring 2017 TR 10:45-12:15 p.m., HH 205


CS 100: Principles of Computing

Required Texts: Intermediate Accounting by Spiceland, Sepe and Nelson, 8E Course notes are available on UNM Learn.

FINANCE 3320 Financial Management Syllabus May-Term 2016 *

General Physics I Class Syllabus

Office Hours: Day Time Location TR 12:00pm - 2:00pm Main Campus Carl DeSantis Building 5136

ITSC 2321 Integrated Software Applications II COURSE SYLLABUS

ACC : Accounting Transaction Processing Systems COURSE SYLLABUS Spring 2011, MW 3:30-4:45 p.m. Bryan 202

Philosophy 27/Political Science 27: ETHICS AND SOCIETY Winter 2013

Spring Course Syllabus. Course Number and Title: SPCH 1318 Interpersonal Communication

Course Syllabus Chem 482: Chemistry Seminar

CHEM 6487: Problem Seminar in Inorganic Chemistry Spring 2010

Psychology 101(3cr): Introduction to Psychology (Summer 2016) Monday - Thursday 4:00-5:50pm - Gruening 413

Journalism 336/Media Law Texas A&M University-Commerce Spring, 2015/9:30-10:45 a.m., TR Journalism Building, Room 104

MAR Environmental Problems & Solutions. Stony Brook University School of Marine & Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS)

BIOS 104 Biology for Non-Science Majors Spring 2016 CRN Course Syllabus

General Chemistry II, CHEM Blinn College Bryan Campus Course Syllabus Fall 2011

Math 22. Fall 2016 TROUT

Course Policies and Syllabus BUL3130 The Legal, Ethical, and Social Aspects of Business Syllabus Spring A 2017 ONLINE

Course Syllabus Art History II ARTS 1304

THE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY Department of Economics. ECON 1012: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS Prof. Irene R. Foster

STANDARDIZED COURSE SYLLABUS

RM 2234 Retailing in a Digital Age SPRING 2016, 3 credits, 50% face-to-face (Wed 3pm-4:15pm)

Course Syllabus. Alternatively, a student can schedule an appointment by .

Required Text: Oltmanns, T. & Emery, R. (2014). Abnormal Psychology (8th Edition) ISBN-13: ISBN-10:

Indiana University Northwest Chemistry C110 Chemistry of Life

Phys4051: Methods of Experimental Physics I

Language Arts Methods

Visual Journalism J3220 Syllabus


Name: Giovanni Liberatore NYUHome Address: Office Hours: by appointment Villa Ulivi Office Extension: 312

KOMAR UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY (KUST)

Class Mondays & Wednesdays 11:00 am - 12:15 pm Rowe 161. Office Mondays 9:30 am - 10:30 am, Friday 352-B (3 rd floor) or by appointment

APPLIED RURAL SOCIOLOGY SOC 474 COURSE SYLLABUS SPRING 2006

2013 District STAR Coordinator Workshop

University of Victoria School of Exercise Science, Physical and Health Education EPHE 245 MOTOR LEARNING. Calendar Description Units: 1.

CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND HUMAN SERVICES Department of Teacher Education and Professional Development

Sociology 521: Social Statistics and Quantitative Methods I Spring 2013 Mondays 2 5pm Kap 305 Computer Lab. Course Website

Instructor. Darlene Diaz. Office SCC-SC-124. Phone (714) Course Information

Coding II: Server side web development, databases and analytics ACAD 276 (4 Units)

Intensive English Program Southwest College

COURSE NUMBER: COURSE NUMBER: SECTION: 01 SECTION: 01. Office Location: WSQ 104. (preferred contact)

COURSE DESCRIPTION PREREQUISITE COURSE PURPOSE

Scottsdale Community College Spring 2016 CIS190 Intro to LANs CIS105 or permission of Instructor

Psychology 102- Understanding Human Behavior Fall 2011 MWF am 105 Chambliss

RL17501 Inventing Modern Literature: Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio and XIV Century Florence 3 credits Spring 2014

ACCT 100 Introduction to Accounting Course Syllabus Course # on T Th 12:30 1:45 Spring, 2016: Debra L. Schmidt-Johnson, CPA

Transcription:

SYLLABUS Cognitive Psychology 0422 Spring 2016 Monday and Wednesday 3:00pm 4:15pm David Lawrence Hall 120 INSTRUCTOR INFORMATION Instructor: Timothy J. Nokes-Malach, PhD Office: 713 LRDC E-mail: nokes@pitt.edu Office phone: 412-624-7789 Office Hours: Mon. & Wed. 10:45am-11:45am, Graduate TA: Brendan Barstow Office: 727 LRDC Email: brendan.barstow@pitt.edu Office Hours: Tues. 2:00-4:00pm, Undergraduate TA: Toyin Ajayi Email: oya4@pitt.edu Office Hours: Mon. 4:30pm-5:30pm, Wed. 11:00am-12:00pm, Undergraduate TA: Elisabeth Estes Email: epe3@pitt.edu Office Hours: Wed. 12:00pm-2:00pm, Undergraduate TA: Merete Chaplin Email: mlc110@pitt.edu Office Hours: Fri. 3:00pm-5:00pm, Undergraduate TA: Morgan Everett Email: mje32@pitt.edu Office Hours: Mon. 12:30pm-2:30pm, Undergraduate TA: Monica Kim Email: euk25@pitt.edu Office Hours: Thurs. 3:00pm-5:00pm, CLASS INFORMATION Course Prerequisite: Psy0010 or 0012 Required Text: Cognitive Psychology and Its Implications, 8 th Edition by John R. Anderson; Readings posted on blackboard WWW: http://courseweb.pitt.edu/ Text on reserve in Hillman Library COURSE OBJECTIVES: This course will introduce core issues, theories, and experimental findings in cognitive psychology. Topics to be covered include perception, attention, memory, imagery, language, learning, reasoning, problem solving, and expertise. The format will include lecture, class activities, and in-class discussion. The goal of the course is for you to develop a deep understanding of cognitive theories, concepts, and their applications. COURSE REQUIREMENTS: Material covered: Lectures will largely coincide with topics covered in the text and readings. However, there will be material in the lectures not covered in the text and readings, and vice-versa. The readings provide the foundation for the lectures and you are expected to complete the readings before we cover those topics in lecture (see the tentative schedule below). Lecture outlines will be posted approximately 12 hours before class. Outlines give an Cognitive Psychology 422 1

overview of what will be covered that day. Lecture slides will be posted after class. All pdf documents posted on course web (e.g., outlines and slides) are best viewed when downloaded from courseweb and opened in a pdf reader application such as Adobe. The exams will primarily test your knowledge and understanding of the material covered in the lectures, but there may be a few questions related to material found only in the text and readings. In the exams you will be asked to interpret novel experiments and apply your knowledge to real world situations, based upon your understanding of the key concepts and experiments presented in the lectures; mere memorization of the "facts" presented in the course will not be sufficient to receive a high grade. Class activities: inquiry tasks, demonstrations, surveys, and end of lecture quizzes. Every class will have some set of individual and/or group inquiry tasks, demonstrations, or surveys, as well as an end of lecture quiz designed to increase your learning of the core concepts and ideas explored in the class. These activities are created to facilitate the acquisition of robust knowledge, increase long-term retention, transfer, and preparation for future learning. By participating in these activities you will earn credit towards the classroom activity grade. Each class period (besides exam days) will have an in-class activity handout that you will use to record your participation and then turn in at the end of class to receive credit. A few activities you will be asked to complete outside of class. Each activity is graded on a satisfactory / non-satisfactory basis. Activity sheets are available for the first 10 minutes of class. I encourage you to come to class even if you will be more than 10 minutes late; however, you will not be able to pick up an activity sheet and thus will not receive the point for that day. You can earn up to 28 total points (one for each non-exam class period and three additional homework activities). Your activity grade will be determined out of 26 (i.e., you can miss two activities and still receive 100% on the activity grade, after that your grade starts decreasing with the number of activities that you miss). There are no makeup activities if you miss a class*. * Except in cases of conflict with religious observances. Please contact us in the first week of class to notify us of any such conflicts. On-line quizzes and pre-lecture. There will be 8 on-line quizzes to complete. Each quiz will consist of the three parts. In the first part you will be asked between 3-6 multiple choice questions about some main concept, result, or finding from the previous lectures. In part 2 you will watch a short 5-7 minute pre-lecture video introducing some of central ideas and approaches for the next topic. In part 3 you will be asked 2-3 multiple choice questions about the pre-lecture video you just watched. To perform well on these quizzes you will need to make sure to review and understand the previous lecture material. You will be given up to two attempts for each quiz. If you get a question incorrect you will get a second chance for that question. You will be able to drop your lowest quiz grade. Quizzes will be completed in Qualtrics. Forty-eight hours before the quiz is due you will receive an email to begin the quiz. Do NOT click on the link until you are READY to take the quiz. Quizzes should take approximately 15-20 minutes with appropriate preparation. Exams: There will be 3 in-class exams. These exams will consist of multiple-choice questions. Each in-class exam will cover the materials since the previous exam. Makeup exams will only be given if there is an emergency (death of immediate family member, serious illness) and with documentation. Crib notes (aka, the cheat sheet): For each exam you will be allowed to bring a class issued note card (3 x 5) with your handwritten notes on one side. We will issue the card in the class before the exam. You will have only a limited amount of space so choose wisely when putting the information on your card. If you forget or lose your card the day of the exam you have to take the exam without it. Cards will be approved by student helpers upon walking into the class. The cards must be turned in with the exam. No magnifying glasses. (Further rules will be discussed before each exam). Design challenges: As a group project (in groups of 1-3 students), you will do two design challenges. You will do a test on 10 people, and you will turn in (to courseweb) a 1.5-2 pg. (single spaced) write up of: what you tried, why you tried it (what cognitive theory or phenomenon influenced your design), what happened, and what you would do differently next time. The grade is based on the quality of your explanations. Only one reflection per challenge is required for the whole group, and the grade is shared by the whole group. Cognitive Psychology 422 2

The first design challenge will be to find a way to teach three pages of material (supplied by the instructor) so that people will remember 80% of the main ideas after being exposed to it (for only 15 minutes of exposure). The second design challenge will be announced in class and available on courseweb. Detailed instructions and requirements for both challenges will be available on courseweb and announced in class. EXPECTATIONS: What you can expect from me: I take teaching seriously and devote a significant amount of time to teaching of this course. You can expect me to foster a climate conducive to learning and intellectual growth. I encourage you to see me if you would like to talk about the course material, study strategies, or anything else related to the course. What I expect from you: I expect you to take primary responsibility for your own learning and adopt a constructive approach to learning the material in the course. This means I expect you to come to class on time and be prepared to participate actively and productively. You are encouraged to ask questions in class, answer questions that I pose during lectures, and offer your own perspective and insight. I expect you to help me set a productive tone for class by working hard and showing respect for other students. I also expect you to turn off/silence your cell phones (no texting), keep conversations with other students limited to before or after class, and file away other work or reading materials. I also expect you to monitor your overall learning and performance in the course (I will give feedback, e.g., with quizzes) and see me if you feel like you are falling behind. Ultimately, you are responsible for your grades. GRADING: Your overall grade will be based on the following: Class activities 10% On-line quizzes 10% Design challenges 20% In-class exams 60% (20% for each in-class exam) Final grades in the course will be computed as indicated in the table on the right. There is no rounding. Grade Mean % A+ > 96.6% A > 93.3% A- > 90.0% B+ > 86.6% B > 83.3% B- > 80.0% C+ > 76.6% C > 73.3% C- > 70.0% D+ > 66.6% D > 63.3% D- > 60.0% ADDITIONAL INFORMATION Policy on make-ups: Missed in-class exams will be given 0. If there is a documented medical illness or family emergency, special arrangements may be made. Policy on cheating and plagiarism: Students who cheat or plagiarize will receive a failing grade for the course. Students suspected of cheating may be asked to answer additional questions or to re-take all or part of an exam. The final grade for an exam may be based on this additional testing. Statement on Classroom Recording: To ensure the free and open discussion of ideas, students may not record classroom lectures, discussion and/or activities without the advance written permission of the instructor, and any such recording properly approved in advance can be used solely for the student s own private use. Disability policy: If you have a disability for which you are or may be requesting an accommodation, you are encouraged to contact both your instructor and Disability Resources and Services, 140 William Pitt Union, (412) 648-7890 / (412) 383-7355 (TTY), as early as possible in the term. DRS will verify your disability and will determine reasonable accommodations for this course. Cognitive Psychology 422 3

CLASS SCHEDULE (tentative) Dates Reading Assignments Topics, Activities, and Due Dates Wed., 1/06 Introduction to the class Activities: intro demonstrations History and Foundations Mon., 1/11 Chapter 1 Activities: introspectionism demo; Survey homework Approaches and Methods Wed., 1/13 Chapter 1 Activities: experiments HW 1 DUE by 2:30pm Mon., 1/18 NO CLASS Dr. Martin Luther King s birthday observance Perception Wed., 1/20 Chapter 2 Activities: demos illusions; feature model Quiz 1 due by 2:30pm Mon., 1/25 Chapter 2 Perception Activities: demos RBC; context effects Attention Wed., 1/27 Chapters 3 Activities: demos sensory store Quiz 2 due by 2:30pm Mon., 2/01 Chapter 3 Attention Activities: demos - type of search and applications Wed., 2/03 REVIEW Chapters 1-3 Attention and brief review Mon., 2/08 EXAM 1: Chapters 1 3 Wed., 2/10 Chapter 4 Visual imagery Activities: demos mental rotation Memory: STM / WM Mon., 2/15 Chapter 6 Activities: demos free recall, duration, capacity Quiz 3 due by 2:30pm Wed., 2/17 Chapter 6 Memory: STM / WM Activities: demos chunking, phonological loop; Memory: LTM Mon., 2/22 Chapter 7 Activities: demos elaboration Quiz 4 due by 2:30pm Wed., 2/24 Chapter 7 Memory: LTM Activities: demos encoding/retrieval interactions Chapter 5 Memory: Schemas, types of memory Mon., 2/29 (pp.97-106; 112-114) Activities: demos schemas Chapter 7 Quiz 5 due by 2:30pm Wed., 3/02 Mon. 3/07 Wed. 3/09 Chapter 5 (pp.97-106; 112-114) Chapter 7 No Class - Spring Break No Class - Spring Break Mon., 3/14 REVIEW Chapters 4-7 Memory: Schemas, types of memory Activities: demos schemas; applications Design challenge 1 due by 2:30 Types of memory and brief review Wed., 3/16 EXAM 2: Chapters 4-7 Mon., 3/21 Chapters 12 and 13 Language Cognitive Psychology 422 4

Activities: demos memory effects on production; speech errors Language Wed., 3/23 Chapters 12 and 13 Activities: demos segmentation; ambiguity predictions Concepts Reading - Chapter on Concepts Activities: demos typicality; exemplar view; Mon., 3/28 posted on courseweb theory view Quiz 6 due by 2:30pm Concepts 2 Reading - Chapter on Concepts Wed., 3/30 Activities: demos theory view; basic level; posted on courseweb conceptual organizations Problem solving Mon., 4/04 Chapter 8 Activities: problem representation Quiz 7 due by 2:30pm Problem solving 2 Wed., 4/06 Chapter 8 Activities: demos analogy Expertise Mon., 4/11 Chapter 9 Activities: demos memory Quiz 8 due by 2:30 Expertise bridging to Creativity Wed., 4/13 Chapter 9 Activities: demos creativity Design challenge 2 due by 2:30 Creativity and brief review Chapters 8, 9, concepts chapter, Mon., 4/18 12, 13 Homework Activity DUE, 2:30pm Wed., 4/20 EXAM 3: Chapters 8, 9, concepts chapter, 12, 13 Cognitive Psychology 422 5