I
want to be a psyhcology major. How do I pick an advisor?

The Psychology
Dept. allows you to ask anyone in the department you want,
as long as that person isn’t already
overloaded with advisees. So, you can ask a faculty
member based on having enjoyed a course from that person,
or because
you think you want to eventually specialize in the area that
person covers, or completely randomly! You are not
restricted to your advisor for getting information about
careers, getting
supervision for research or independent study, or talking
about life in general, so it’s no big deal. After
you ask the faculty member’s permission, bring the
Registrar’s
form to the Psychology Office for Dr. Ault to sign. You
can leave it with Mrs. Duncan.
How
late can I declare the major?
The College regulations
mandate that you declare a major before returning to campus
in the fall semester of your junior year. It’s
one of the standards of progress that can keep you from returning
if you fail to declare something as your major. You can,
however, change your major after that occurs by submitting
the appropriate form to the Registrar’s office (after
getting the Chair’s signature). The more you have
had psychology courses (and in the appropriate areas and levels),
the later you can declare and still complete the major in a
timely fashion. We advise, however, that you declare
as soon as possible, so that a Psychology professor can give
you advice about sequencing your course requirements and which
courses to put where on your tree.
Can
a course count twice? For both an area requirement
(e.g. cognitive) and a specific type requirement (e.g. methods)
YES! In fact, given the requirement for the methods series
to have at least one from the set 301, 302, 303, 304, or 323
and at least one from the set 314, 315, 316, or 318, two of
the four “area” requirements will automatically
be met that way.
Can
I take more than one methods course in a single semester?
YES! Although,
we do not encourage it. Methods
classes all have laboratory work in addition to the normal
lecture hours, so these courses are considered “heavy” ones. On
the other hand, we recommend that you take the topics that
interest you the most, so if they happen to be the same semester, go for it!
Can
I take Psy 314, 315, 316 or 318 concurrently with Psy 310?
NO. These four courses assume that you have taken (and
passed) Psy 310. You may, however, take the other methods
courses (Psy 301, 302, 303, 304, 323) simultaneously with Psy
310 or even before it.
Can
I put the capstones last on my tree?
YES and NO.
Yes, in the sense that we designate enough
spaces for all senior majors between the capstone alternatives.
No,
in the sense that if you particularly want one of the courses
over the other, or you have a time conflict with one of the
courses, then you need to try for the desired course early
in your tree. While we do guarantee that there will be
a space available in a capstone for you, we do NOT guarantee
that you’ll get the capstone you most want. We
balance the courses so that all students have a seminar-like
experience rather than one course being over-subscribed and
the other being under-subscribed. Failure to put the
capstones early on your tree, or failure to put both down as
alternatives may mean that you take your lesser-preferred course
and have to drop some other course to make it fit with your
schedule.
How
do I pick a topic for a senior thesis?
Besides lightning
bolts striking from the Heavens, ideas can grow out of previous
courses, especially Methods classes and seminars because these frequently include
a “research proposal” or “mini-experiment” during the
class. Expansion of one of these may be a perfect thesis idea. Some
students get ideas after working with a faculty member on a research project
or by being an assistant to another student’s research project. These
opportunities are often publicized by word of mouth, so ask around and let it
be known that you’re interested in helping.
How
do courses I take elsewhere count? Either
from studying abroad or elsewhere?
There are two aspects
to courses counting at Davidson. One
is whether a course earns college credit and applies toward
the 32 courses needed for graduation. The Registrar’s
office rules on that, and all JYA or other on-leave students
must check with the Registrar’s office for approval of
courses taken elsewhere.
The other is whether
a course may count as one of the 10 needed for the Psychology
major. The Chair of the Department
rules on that, and students are encouraged to consult with
Dr. Ault. In general, the following principles apply:
a) If the course is fully equivalent to one of our 200-level
courses, it will be accepted and given the Davidson course
number.
b) If the course is similar to a 200-level course but
isn’t offered at Davidson or if it combines parts of
our courses, then the Chair will, in consultation with other
faculty in the department who have looked at the syllabus or
other course materials, give it a special transfer number that
indicates which “area” it might count for. For
example, a life-span developmental course (covering one-third
of our child, adolescent, and aging courses) would get the
number Psy 297 and count in the Developmental area. A
course in Abnormal Child (much more specialized than our Psy
231) would get the transfer credit for Psy 298 and count in
the social-I/O-abnormal area.
c) We do not allow students to use transfer credit for
any 300-level or 400-level required course, that is, for research
design (Psy 310), methods courses (Psy 301-304, 323, 314-318),
seminars (Psy 350-380), or capstones (Psy 400, 401, 402). If
you take such a course, it will transfer as one of the special
200-level numbers or as a tutorial and might count in the “area” but
it will not exempt you from taking the 6 required upper level
courses at Davidson. Exceptions to this rule are occasionally
made for students who transfer to Davidson from another school
at the beginning of their junior year, but these exceptions
are rare.
If
I need a tutor in a psychology class, whom do I contact?
One option is to
contact the Dean of Students office, which has a list of junior
and senior psychology majors that the Psychology Department has recommended. Contact
that office about making arrangements. Another option is to talk to your professor,
who might be able to get someone
else in your class to help you.
What's
the difference between a tutorial and a practicum (internship)?
A tutorial (Psy
330-349) is a directed, intensive study of a topic. The
most common type of tutorial is for students to prepare for their thesis research
by spending a semester reading journal articles and books, discussing the material
in weekly or twice-monthly meetings with the supervising faculty member, and
writing an Introduction and perhaps a Method section to what will eventually
be the student’s thesis. Another common type of tutorial is working
as a research assistant for a faculty member. Again the student would do
a lot of reading, but there would also be data collection efforts and perhaps
research meetings with the other students in that lab. A third, less common
type of tutorial, is for the student who wants to explore a topic in Psychology
that the College does not offer as course material. Essentially, the student
would design the syllabus for the course—proposing what textbook to read
and what papers to write or other experiences to have that would demonstrate
the student’s mastery of the course content.
A practicum is
intended to give the student hands-on contact in an applied
setting 8-12 hours a week,
supplemented by readings
and meetings with the supervisory
faculty member. The course is graded pass-fail because the Davidson faculty
member typically does not see the student’s off-site work. Nearly
every sub-discipline area of psychology can support a practicum, although by
far the most common are clinical and business settings. In the Charlotte
area, students can arrange a practicum at such agencies as The Relatives and
Transition House (for run-away children), Arosa House (for abused and neglected
children) hospital and medical office settings (for behavioral medicine interventions,
pediatric wards, chaplain’s office to help counseling patients), Reachline
Telephone counseling, daycare centers, retirement communities, print and broadcast
media (Charlotte Observer, WBTV, Creative Loafing), various businesses (training
and development, personnel testing, advertising), the Center for Applied Cognitive
Studies, the Center for Creative Leadership, The Children’s Law Center,
and so on. For most of these settings, the student needs to initiate
the contact and arrange for the experience, although a faculty member might
be able
to provide some help.