Report 3
A Module-Based Research Project:
Modeling Critical Thinking in Psychology
Nina Lamson and Katherine Kipp
Asking students to do a research paper, even after providing them with lengthy instructions
and detailed examples, often can yield disappointing results. It is apparent that the task is
overwhelming, partly because a comprehension for the purpose of the process may be
lacking. We suggest that, as a foundation for upper division courses, a component of the
introductory course explains the research process and how this process forms the basis
from which psychology content evolves. We present a sample research project of 10,
hands-on, incremental modules designed to model how critical thinking is an integral part
of the research process in psychology. Through this process, students gain knowledge in
reading research articles and answering pertinent questions that provide the support for an
introduction section. They gain an understanding of how to conduct a study by partici-
pating in the study, as well as learning how to collect, analyze, and discuss data. The
project culminates in a final research paper and an in-class poster session.
Project Overview
The project centers on an experiment investigating the effects of talking on a cell phone
while driving, a topic interesting to students and easily adapted for in-class experimenta-
tion. The hypothesis investigated is that cell phone conversation would result in slower
walking pace on a maze and a decline in accuracy on a cognitive load memory task. Several
articles were chosen for the literature review based on their exploration of the effects of cell
phone use on driving. For the actual in-class experiment, students acted either as experi-
menters or as research participants. The basic method involved taking a memory test for a
baseline score; then half the participants continued to be tested for memory while they
walked a maze in the classroom, and the remaining participants simply listened to random
Teaching Critical Thinking in Psychology: A Handbook of Best Practices Edited by D. S. Dunn, J. S. Halonen, and R. A. Smith
© 2008 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. ISBN: 978-1-405-17402-2