Ph.D. student in Industrial-Organizational Psychology with a concentration in Occupational Health Psychology.

This tumblelog focuses on Industrial/Organizational Psychology and Organizational Psychology (a combination of psychology of the workplace, human resources, and applied statistics with some business). Throw in Occupational Health Psychology, Work and Stress, Social Psychology, Forensic Psychology, Motivation and Emotion, and even the occasional Clinical Psychology thoughts and topics and this is the result.

I try to find articles from the professional journals, blogs, popular news, and anywhere else that strikes my fancy...

I'm now starting to blog here - the name matches my main blog name/URL a bit better...Psych at Work (the new Applied Psych)


Posts tagged school


Link

May 16, 2010
@ 4:33 pm
Permalink

5 notes

Life Isn't Hell, Comps Are... »

First, I have to apologize for my extended absence from both this site and my blog… I’ve not only been experiencing some career path type crises, but also studying for, taking, and hopefully passing comps. 
Comps, or comprehensive exams or qualifying exams, are what students in Ph.D. track programs take at the completion of all the course work (usually) or around the end of the third year in the program. From what I know of them - so mostly in applied psychology fields - they literally encompass anything you might have learned in a course (or were expected to learn) or what might have been offered in courses you didn’t take, but could have. It’s the entire subject matter that you are getting a Ph.D. in… this includes history, current issues, definitions, measurement and procedural knowledge… literally everything you can think of. 

While the process and timelines differ by program and discipline, the one thing they all share is the unbelievable amount of stress and pressure associated with them. You study for at least a semester, if not more, usually while continuing to take classes. There is no study guide (or guide really at all) and there’s virtually no way you can ever feel fully prepared for them - after all, you could not possibly have read every article, every book, every blog, every conference paper or presentation, attended all conferences and presentations… at some point, you have to just be confident that you know enough to take on most questions. Basically, it’s terrifying and in many ways, the opposite of what any Ph.D. student is used to feeling, at least in preparing for any school work or exams. 

The other part of this whole process that’s in many ways unique for doctoral students is the collaboration. This doesn’t happen in every program throughout the country, but at least for me, I was studying and dividing up book and chapter summaries with the other members of my cohort who were taking this exam with me. We met weekly (at least) and literally had to rely on each other and each other’s work in order to cover all the most basic materials. It’s interesting to think about how, up until this point, we rarely work together in such a truly interdependent manner for such an extended period of time (and certainly not with such high stakes), yet once we we graduate (or maybe the closer we get to graduation), the more this is expected of us. Professors collaborate with their graduate students and each other and practitioners often work as part of a team - whether it’s a consulting firm or an organization or an interdisciplinary team. 

The importance of teamwork... I’m sure the evil genius who created comps was probably not thinking about them in such a meta-cognitive way and didn’t realize the ways in which the very process prepares doctoral students for their futures, but it’s odd to realize how much this happens anyways, even if we don’t want it to. In our future careers, our very livelihood will depend on others - at least for most of us in the social sciences - and it’s odd to think that this test, which many think has very little utility for future practitioners, actually teaches us about ourselves and how we work as well as the content of the material. Honestly, at most points in the process, I could barely grasp the minimum amount of material that we were supposed to be learning on, that we were consciously focused on. 

Honestly, now that comps are over, despite the fact that I’m overwhelmed by catching up on everything else I didn’t do while I was studying, I’m finding that the entire process provided me with a lot of food for thought… even though much of it is far from what I imagine was intended to be provoking my thoughts… anyone else ever find themselves thinking this way?


Link

Nov 19, 2009
@ 4:26 am
Permalink

1 note

The Gay Animal Kingdom : The Frontal Cortex »

Posted on: October 30, 2009 11:04 AM, by Jonah Lehrer

I still don’t have any additional details, but the initial newspaper report from the Jacksonville Journal-Courier is disturbing:

A Southwestern High School English teacher has been suspended after reports he had students in his classes to read an article about homsexuality in the animal kingdom.

Dan Delong of Carlinville acknowledged his suspension but declined to comment further until he spoke with his union representative.

Delong is said to have allowed students to read the article “The Gay Animal Kingdom” from the June 7, 2006, edition of Seed magazine. Seed magazine is a science and culture publication.

The article by Jonah Lehrer talks about the research of Joan Roughgarden, a biology professor at Stanford University who said she has documented homosexual societies among the more than 450 animal species.

School district secretary Pat Milner said a special School Board meeting has been set for 6 p.m. Monday at the district office in Piasa to discuss personnel/employee discipline.

Here, in case you’re interested, is the controversial article.

UPDATE: Here’s a Facebook page in support of Mr. Delong. And be sure to check out some of the comments below by his former students.