Teaching Critical Thinking in Psychology: A Handbook of Best Practices

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Elizabeth Yost Hammer


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Service-Learning Assignments

Service learning cuts across all disciplines and, when innovative faculty are creative with


assignments, it can be effective in any field. Psychology, with its emphasis on human


behavior, is an obvious choice for this pedagogy (Ozorak, 2004). In studying human


behavior, psychologists can use community interactions to illustrate theories and provide


opportunities for concepts to come to life more easily than can professors in many other


fields. Courses such as developmental psychology and social psychology are easily applied


to community sites serving a wide array of populations. In fact, most social psychology


courses have a unit on prosocial behavior—and what better way to illuminate theories of


helping behavior than to have students engage in community service? Therefore, to


encourage students to apply social psychological constructs to real-world situations and


to develop their critical thinking skills, I have incorporated service-learning assignments


into the course.


I invite three to five site supervisors to come to class to make presentations about their


sites and recruit students in the first week of the semester. I typically require students to


complete a minimum of 16 hours at the site of their choice; 8 hours must be completed


by midterm with the final 8 completed by the end of the semester. Students have time


sheets for their supervisors to sign. Depending on practical issues (e.g., course load or class


size), I alternate between two types of assignments: maintaining a service-learning journal


and a more traditional paper.


For the journal assignment, students maintain a structured social psychology journal


throughout the semester. For each chapter, students write two or three pages on a specific


topic. Table 15.1 provides examples of typical writing assignments. Students turn in their


journals seven times over the course of the semester (approximately every 2 weeks), and


the overall journal grade is the same percentage of the final grade as an exam (usually


about 15%).


For the more traditional paper assignment, students write a midterm and a final paper


integrating course material into their experiences at the sites. For the midterm paper, I give


students the following guidelines.


Table 15.1. Sample of Chapter Entries for Service-Learning Journal Assignment in Social Psychology


Chapter on Prosocial Behavior


Service learning is a situation where you are engaging in helping behavior. Using this experience,


describe some motivational factors, situational factors, personal influences, and interpersonal


influences that have come into play. Be clear and specific by only picking a handful of memorable


factors or influences.


Chapter on Social Cognition


Discuss schemas. What are some schemas that have influenced your behavior or the behavior of


others at your service-learning site? Apply research evidence presented in Chapter 3, using it as


support for your personal observations.

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