PSYCH 101/001: Term 1 2018
PSYCH 101/001: Term 1 2018
PSYCH 101/001: Term 1 2018
Term 1 2018
About This Course
Psychology is a science and an academic discipline. Today, this discipline is defined as the scientific
study of behavior and the mind, and their cognitive and neurobiological bases. Psychology also has
an applied component, where professionals with training and clinical skills help people to cope more
effectively with life/school/work issues and with mental health problems.
This course is an introductory level survey of the methods and findings of psychology as a science. It
focuses on the scientific method and its use in several content areas: Attention & consciousness,
sensation, perception, learning and memory. A comparable introduction to other content areas of
scientific psychology, such as personality, emotions and motivation, as well as mental wellness and illness is provided by
PSYCH-102.
Class Meetings
Classes are held every Mon, Wed and Fri, from 8:00 to 8:50 am, in CIRS Room 1250. The CIRS building is located
at 2260 West Mall.
Please respect your peers and instructors by arriving on time and by not leaving early.
You do not need to bring your textbook to class.
We will be using iClickers for many class meetings. An iClicker is a tool for in-class polling, quizzing, tracking
class participation, etc. To participate in all such activities, please bring to your iClicker remote to class.
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Course Leaders
The course leaders are here for you, to facilitate learning, to answer questions, to help you understand course materials and
requirements … to lead you to a successful course completion. The course leaders also are responsible for preparing and delivering
lectures and other course activities (i.e., demos, quizzes, tests) and for keeping records.
The instructor for this course is Professor Peter Graf
Office phone: 604.822.6635
Office location: CIRS 4352 (upstairs from the classroom)
Office hours: Mondays & Fridays from 9:00 to 9:45 am, I will be at THE LOOP café, located in the lobby of the
CIRS building outside the classroom. If this ‘office hour’ does not work for you, please make an appointment.
Email: pgraf@psych.ubc.ca. Please include “PSYCH 101” in the subject line of your email to ensure it does not
land in my trash folder. Keep in mind that a response to your question might be in your class notes, in this
syllabus, or it might have been addressed in Piazza -- the course-web discussion forum.
C. TurnItIn
As part of this course, you are required to write a research essay and submit it for review and evaluation by your peers. We are using
TurnItIn in connection with the research essays. TurnItIn is -- among other things -- a plagiarism-identification service, and UBC
subscribes to this service. When you submit your research essay to this service, it checks its originality, and thereby helps avoid and
prevent plagiarism.
Please create an account on TurnItIn. To create an account, go to:
https://www.turnitin.com/newuser_type.asp?r=92.4176455626981&svr=20&lang=en_us&
You will need this information: Class ID: 18712407
Class Name: PSYCH 101 001 8 AM
Enrollment Key: WeAre001
If you already have a TurnItIn account, you will need the information above to join Psych 101 001.
D. iClicker: MC questions and polls will be included in many class meetings, and your responses to them will count toward your
course grade. An iClicker can be purchased at the UBC Bookstore, used or new. Please register your iClicker on the course
website. If you fail to do so, your clicker responses will not be counted toward your course grade.
E. Course Website. The website for this course is on canvas (canvas.ubc.ca). Use your CWL (campus wide login) to connect to this
site. This site is where you will find everything you need for the course, the most up-to-date copy of this syllabus, pdfs of slides
used in lectures, instructions for assignments, announcements, links to discussion groups, links to TurnItIn, LaunchPad and
Piazza, as well as a record of grades. Go to this website early in the course and return to it frequently – at least a few times each
week -- for announcements, discussions on current issues, problems and their solutions, as well as for connecting with other
students, for finding answers to common questions, etc.
F. Piazza: Piazza is a versatile tool for discussing course issues, asking questions, practicing question answering skills, honing peer
teaching skills, connecting with other students, commiserating with other students, etc. For most issues/questions that you have
about any aspect of the course, turn to Piazza rather than the instructor or TAs because your issues/questions are likely to be of
interest to other students, and other students are likely to have the answers you are seeking. We will be on Piazza at least a few
times each day, in order to guide discussions, clarify questions and answers, correct misinformation, etc.
Piazza provides detailed data about the number of postings/contributions viewed by each student, the number of questions asked
by each student, the number of questions answered by each student, etc. These data are used to determine your class
participation grade.
Please create an account on Piazza. To create a Piazza account which is linked with the correct class, please use this link:
piazza.com/ubc.ca/winterterm22018/psyc101001
iClicker & Piazza: To get the maximum out of this course, you need to become actively engaged in every part of it, come prepared to
class with issues/questions that occurred in the course of reading the text, or in conversations with class mates, friends or family. Take
part in class discussions and in Q&A sessions, and respond thoughtfully to all clicker items/questions. Your engagement and
participation in course counts for 2% of your grade, and your correct responses to in-class clicker questions counts for 3% of your
course grade.
Your engagement in the course outside of class meetings counts for 4% of your course grade. These 4% are awarded for making
meaningful, thoughtful and constructive contributions on Piazza, according to the scheme in the listing of Learning Appraisals. [Note:
Writing a Piazza question that asks for information included in this syllabus or that was announced in class does not count as a
meaningful contribution.]
LaunchPad activities, Syllabus Quiz, Mid-term, and Final Examination: The LaunchPad activites – which count for 8% of your
grade -- are intended to make you familiar with each topic covered in the course, to prepare you for class activities, to ascertain your
mastery of the materials covered in each chapter, etc.
The syllabus quiz is an incentive for you to become thoroughly familiar with the syllabus, with everything that is required for succeeding
in this course, to encourage you to pay attention to deadlines, etc.
The mid-term will be given in the classroom at the same time as the regularly scheduled class, on Wednesday October 17 2018, while
the final examination -- a 2-hour event -- will be scheduled by the Faculty of Arts between December 4 and 19, 2018. NOTE: Do not
make any travel arrangements before you know the date of the final examination. Being away from UBC will not be accepted as a
reason for missing the examination.
The mid-term test and the final examination will consist of a combination of Multiple-Choice [MC] and Short-Answer [SA] questions
based on materials covered in the text, in the lectures and in class-activities. The final examination is cumulative.
The SA items on the test and exam usually create more anxiety than the MC items, probably because the former are less familiar. The
SA items will require a short-response, from a few words to a maximum of 1 or 2 sentences. Nearly all SA items included on the mid-
term test or on the final examination will be based on or direct duplicates of questions asked in class. Therefore, pay attention in class,
take careful notes, and above all, participate in class activities by generating responses/answers to all questions/items.
Research Essay & Peer Evaluations of Research Essays: The document called “Essay Assignment Description & Rubric” gives
detailed specifications for these two course components.
Your Research Essay must address one of the assigned topics, must be prepared according to the American Psychological
Association (APA) format, and must be submitted – to both your TurnItIn & on Canvas (use the module called ‘Research Essay
Grade Inflation: Is the tendency for academic grades for work of comparable quality to increase over time.
In order to succeed in this course, you should expect to give it your full attention for 2 to 3 hours for each 1-hour of class
time (10-15 hours per week). Take careful notes, read actively, come prepared for class, participate in class activities,
demonstration and discussions, dare to make errors and keep asking questions. Apply what you learn in the course to
your own learning, to making you a more effective student.
UBC has a number of web resources which provide excellent tips and insights into how to get the most out of university;
browse them, use them to your advantage:
Skylight (http://sclt.science.ubc.ca/resources)
Getting better grades at UBC (https://students.ubc.ca/enrolment/better-grades)
the UBC Centre for Teaching, Learning and Technology (http://ctlt.ubc.ca/resources/learning/)
the Carl Wieman Science Education Initiative (www.cwsei.ubc.ca)
for advise from senior Science students, check out an account published by Ashley Welsh
(http://www.cwsei.ubc.ca/resources/student_guidance.htm).
Check out the UBC Learning Commons (http://learningcommons.ubc.ca/), an evolving collection of UBC-selected learning
resources that guide students through a process of discovery. Through an emphasis on student-driven initiatives and
shared-decision making, the UBC learning commons enhances the experience of all UBC students.
Take charge of your own learning, and take full advantage of all of the support available to you.
Physical or Other Learning Disabilities/Challenges: The UBC Center for Accessibility provide leadership in examining
policies, processes, and programs through the lens of diversity. Contact them; the Centre provides support and
programming initiatives designed to remove barriers for students with disabilities and facilitates disability related
accommodations for members of the UBC Vancouver community.
We work with students, staff, and faculty to build a community for all (https://students.ubc.ca/about-student-
services/access-diversity/)
UBC is committed to equal opportunity in education for all students including those with documented physical disabilities or
learning disabilities. If you have a disability that affects your learning or performance on tests or exams please contact us
(https://students.ubc.ca/about-student-services/access-diversity/) or visit Brock Hall room 1203, 1874 East Mall, Phone:
604.822.5844.