Description

Book Synopsis
One of the hallmarks of a quality liberal arts education is providing undergraduates the opportunity to wrestle with controversial issues. Yet many teachers feel ill-equipped when it comes to broaching disagreeable topics, managing the resulting heated debates, or helping students to separate their personal feelings from scientific evidence.

This book provides frameworks for teaching controversial topics and skills for handling disruptions, so teachers can help students evaluate evidence and develop testable questions.

Specific teaching topics covered include:
  • evolutionary psychology
  • childrearing
  • sexual orientation
  • animal experimentation
  • evil
  • diversity and social justice
  • gender and ethnicity
  • religion
  • disability
  • healthcare policy


Table of Contents

Contributors

Foreword: Deciding Where to Stand
Jane S. Halonen

Preface

Teaching About Controversial Issues: An Introduction
Dana S. Dunn, Regan A. R. Gurung, Karen Z. Naufel, and Janie H. Wilson

I. Guiding Frameworks for Teaching About Controversial Issues

  1. Frames of Reference: Social Psychological Perspectives for Teaching About Controversial Matters
    Dana S. Dunn, Regan A. R. Gurung, and Karen Z. Naufel
  2. Preventing and Handling Classroom Disruptions
    Kristin M. Vespia and Tonya E. Filz
  3. Treating Students as Early-Career Professionals: The Ethics of Teaching
    Maureen A. McCarthy and R. Eric Landrum

II. Helping Students Arrive at an Empirically Based Conclusion

  1. Seven Tools for Teaching Evolutionary Psychology
    David M. Buss
  2. Hitting Close to Home: Teaching About Spanking
    Elizabeth T. Gershoff
  3. Sexual Orientation, Marriage, and Students of Faith
    David G. Myers
  4. Addressing the Role of Animal Research in Psychology
    Suzanne C. Baker and Sherry L. Serdikoff

III. Opening Consideration of Multiple Views

  1. Overcoming Discomfort When Teaching About Evil and Immorality
    Karen Z. Naufel
  2. Anticipating and Working With Controversy in Diversity and Social Justice Topics
    Cheryl B. Warner, Rosemary E. Phelps, Delishia M. Pittman, and Carla S. Moore
  3. Gender Matters: Engaging Students in Controversial Issues
    Elizabeth Yost Hammer and Eugenia M. Valentine
  4. Teaching About Race and Ethnicity
    Mary E. Kite
  5. Spirituality and Religion: How Contexts, Developmental Processes, and Personal Experiences Influence Behavior
    Dean D. VonDras
  6. Disability as Diversity Rather Than (In)Difference: Understanding Others' Experiences Through One's Own
    Dana S. Dunn, David J. Fisher, and Brittany M. Beard
  7. Health Psychology and Policy: When Politics Infiltrates Science
    Regan A. R. Gurung and Daniel Bruns

IV. Concluding Thoughts and Going Forward

  1. Using Controversies to Teach Scientific Thinking in Psychology: Topics and Issues
    Jeffrey D. Holmes

Index

About the Editors

Controversy in the Psychology Classroom

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    A Paperback / softback by Dana S. Dunn, Regan A. R. Gurung, Karen Z. Naufel

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      Publisher: American Psychological Association
      Publication Date: 15/12/2012
      ISBN13: 9781433812385, 978-1433812385
      ISBN10: 143381238X
      Also in:
      Psychology

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      One of the hallmarks of a quality liberal arts education is providing undergraduates the opportunity to wrestle with controversial issues. Yet many teachers feel ill-equipped when it comes to broaching disagreeable topics, managing the resulting heated debates, or helping students to separate their personal feelings from scientific evidence.

      This book provides frameworks for teaching controversial topics and skills for handling disruptions, so teachers can help students evaluate evidence and develop testable questions.

      Specific teaching topics covered include:
      • evolutionary psychology
      • childrearing
      • sexual orientation
      • animal experimentation
      • evil
      • diversity and social justice
      • gender and ethnicity
      • religion
      • disability
      • healthcare policy


      Table of Contents

      Contributors

      Foreword: Deciding Where to Stand
      Jane S. Halonen

      Preface

      Teaching About Controversial Issues: An Introduction
      Dana S. Dunn, Regan A. R. Gurung, Karen Z. Naufel, and Janie H. Wilson

      I. Guiding Frameworks for Teaching About Controversial Issues

      1. Frames of Reference: Social Psychological Perspectives for Teaching About Controversial Matters
        Dana S. Dunn, Regan A. R. Gurung, and Karen Z. Naufel
      2. Preventing and Handling Classroom Disruptions
        Kristin M. Vespia and Tonya E. Filz
      3. Treating Students as Early-Career Professionals: The Ethics of Teaching
        Maureen A. McCarthy and R. Eric Landrum

      II. Helping Students Arrive at an Empirically Based Conclusion

      1. Seven Tools for Teaching Evolutionary Psychology
        David M. Buss
      2. Hitting Close to Home: Teaching About Spanking
        Elizabeth T. Gershoff
      3. Sexual Orientation, Marriage, and Students of Faith
        David G. Myers
      4. Addressing the Role of Animal Research in Psychology
        Suzanne C. Baker and Sherry L. Serdikoff

      III. Opening Consideration of Multiple Views

      1. Overcoming Discomfort When Teaching About Evil and Immorality
        Karen Z. Naufel
      2. Anticipating and Working With Controversy in Diversity and Social Justice Topics
        Cheryl B. Warner, Rosemary E. Phelps, Delishia M. Pittman, and Carla S. Moore
      3. Gender Matters: Engaging Students in Controversial Issues
        Elizabeth Yost Hammer and Eugenia M. Valentine
      4. Teaching About Race and Ethnicity
        Mary E. Kite
      5. Spirituality and Religion: How Contexts, Developmental Processes, and Personal Experiences Influence Behavior
        Dean D. VonDras
      6. Disability as Diversity Rather Than (In)Difference: Understanding Others' Experiences Through One's Own
        Dana S. Dunn, David J. Fisher, and Brittany M. Beard
      7. Health Psychology and Policy: When Politics Infiltrates Science
        Regan A. R. Gurung and Daniel Bruns

      IV. Concluding Thoughts and Going Forward

      1. Using Controversies to Teach Scientific Thinking in Psychology: Topics and Issues
        Jeffrey D. Holmes

      Index

      About the Editors

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