Summer 2016 Course Offerings in Department of Psychology

March 3, 2016

Summer 2016 Course Offerings in the Department of Psychology.  If you have any questions, please contact the Department office at wehlage@uleth.ca.

 

Psychology Summer Session Courses 2016:

 

Summer Session I [May 4 to June 15]

 

Psychology 2110A - Introduction to Child Development [MW, 1300-1550]

Instructor: Dr. Margaret Forgie

Course Description: This course is designed to provide an introduction to the field of developmental

psychology, which is the application of the fundamentals of scientific psychology to the understanding of the

normative pattern of development in humans. At this introductory level, the emphasis is placed on the period of

early childhood (conception to five years of age) with the aim to give students a foundation for more advanced

courses in developmental psychology at senior levels. All topics will be addressed from a broad, interactionist

perspective that includes biological, cognitive, social, and emotional processes. In doing so, three main areas will

be addressed: a description of processes that apply to all children or universals (e.g., genetics, prenatal

development, predispositions toward specific environmental stimuli); a description and investigation of the

sources and types of individual differences (e.g., sex differences, attachment and parenting style); and a

description of the consequences of severe disturbances of or deviations from the normative path (e.g., genetic

disorders, environmental deprivation).

 

Psychology 3000A - History of Psychology [MW, 0900-1150]

Instructor: Deanna Forrester

 Course Description: In this class we are going to explore both the philosophical background to psychology as an

academic discipline and the history of psychology as a field. We will examine the ideas of specific philosophers

and schools of thought focusing on how they provided the foundation for later psychological thinking. We will

try to uncover some of the historical events and colourful personalities that have affected the trajectory of

psychology as a science and profession.

 

Psychology 3000B - Infant Development [TR, 1300-1550]

Instructor: Afra Foroud

 Course Description: How do infants develop from relatively helpless newborns to walking, talking, intentional

beings, with likes, dislikes, friends, expectations, and reasoning abilities within the first 2 years of life? We will

examine how studies capitalize on prenatal and infant behaviour, and physiology, to understand early social and

cognitive learning and, how rapid and profound changes in the first 2 years of life impact adulthood.

 

 

 

Psychology 4000A –Psychology of Sleep [TR, 0900-1150]

Instructor: Miranda Lucas

Course Description:  Psychological and neurological aspects of normal and disordered sleep. This seminar style

course will require students to read, discuss and write critics on primary sleep research literature.

 

Summer Session II/III [July 6 to August 17]

 

Psychology 3000N – Primates in Perspective [TR, 1800-2050]

Instructor: Nöelle Gunst

Course Description:  This course aims to highlight and explain some complex behavioral features in non-human

primates (e.g., third-party affiliation/aggression, tool use, symbolic communication) from a mechanistic and

evolutionary perspective. The course will consist of an assortment of lectures and student presentations of

scientific articles.