PSYC 3201 101 Introductory Social Psychology
2) Application activities (max of 60 points). There will be application activitie: small groups during the class time. These activities will occur randomly through Missed in-class activities cannot be made up unless it is an approved absence (le religious observance, university sanctioned student event, or illness). Please inf.( will be absent for these approved reasons before you miss class, and we can arra work. If this is not arranged prior to your absence, then the work cannot be math
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3) Op-ed pieces (50 points each, 100 points max). Social psychology theory a practical implications for understanding and improving our world. As such, you op-ed pieces on social topics you find of timely importance. These should each 1 words in length and draw on social psychology theory and research from the texl TWO academic social psychology research articles (minimum) to make your relevant articles, you will have to do a literature search. The article (and any ot pieces) should be referenced in text and at the end of the op-ed piece in APA sty articles referenced should also be submitted with your op-eds. Assignments shot to the D2L Dropbox. Turnitin will be used to check for plagiarism. There will bc each day late (including after start of class and weekends). Additional instrui
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4) Extra credit opportunities. You can earn extra credit three different ways for a maximum of
15 extra credit points: • Students may participate in psychology research offered through the Marquette University Participant Pool either online or in person. Student participants will be awarded 1 point per 30 minutes of research participation. Submit documentation to the instructor.
Activity Details
Instructions
I’ve been getting some good questions about the Op-ed. Compiling the top ten here. Remember, Op-eds are due to the D2L Dropbox BY THE START OF CLASS on 11/3 (per the syllabus). 1) Strive for 750 words, but +/- 25 words is fine. UPDATE: Word count applies to Op-ed only, not references or headline. 2) You do NOT need an APA-formatted title page. Just your name, class/section, and your (hopefully catchy and interesting) headline at the top of the page. 3) Be careful you’re not trying to cover too much. Focus on one main point. 4) If you’re having a hard time narrowing down a topic you’re passionate about, one idea is to check the research. If there’s more research available on one topic than another, that gives you more to work with and cite. (Remember, you’ll have another Op-ed assignment later in the semester, so you can write about another topic then.) 5) Research articles will likely SUPPORT (rather than be) your main point. Use them to strengthen your argument and show your reader how/why you know what you’re talking about and why your thoughts/opinions are well-founded. Article information might go best in your introduction if the article makes a strong statement about your main point, OR they could be integrated into the body of your paper, where you’re offering examples for your argument. 5) Don’t forget to submit the full articles you used with your paper. If you can’t submit all three files together in the Dropbox because of format, e-mail your articles – not the op-ed – to your TA by the deadline. Op-ed should still be submitted to D2L or it won’t be graded. 6) Podcasts (even if scientific) don’t count for an article. I’ll only accept research articles from academic journals. However, if you like an APA podcast, for example, note the speaker and see if they’ve contributed to any research in the field. That might be a good start. 7) I shared resources on APA format and passive/active voice in the Content area of D2L. Use them! 8) Don’t utilize your textbook to quote a definition. You’ll lose your reader if you tell them what self-esteem or prejudice is according to your textbook authors. Only define something if it’s not common knowledge (i.e., if your typical reader doesn’t know what it is), and even then, it’s best to define in your own words rather than a quote. Instead, use your textbook to reference and expound on a concept related to your topic (e.g., self-fulfilling prophecy, specific stereotypes, dual-process model). It’s also fine if you want to look ahead to future chapters and use something from those. We haven’t yet covered aggression, attraction, intimate relationships, or prosocial behavior, but there’s lots of rich information available there. 9) Also, research cited in your textbook would not count as a textbook reference (that’s not from the textbook authors but from other researchers). BUT, you could look up that original article and potentially use it as a research article if it fits the requirements. 10) Per APA format, use an in-text citation whenever you quote, paraphrase or summarize research and ideas that are not your own. This may include theories, statistics, etc. You should also cite whenever you present a fact that is not common knowledge.