I appreciate your comments as I made my post without having read the
entire thread.  Clearly you do not need any "advice" from yours truly to
go out on your own!  I agree that the NOBA textbooks are far from perfect
but I'm did not know that we can use a section from any text if we follow
the guidelines you specify.

It's understandable that you do not wish to 'go public' relative to which
textbooks you like/don't like.  However, since you clearly have valuable
expertise on this matter, could some of us email you directly concerning
which textbooks cover various topics very well?

Thanks Annette for your perspectives always.

Joan
jwarm...@oakton.edu

____________________________________________________
> Thanks to Joan and Gerald and Bob!
>
> I am definitely going to check out the book Bob recommended.
>
> As you may or may not know about using NOBA and other OERs: you can mix
> and
> match without violating...anything! So I have been combining SEVERAL OERs
> in my intro class now as well as under properly allowed copyright, using
> LESS THAN ONE CHAPTER of any textbook as long as you offer it behind a
> fire
> wall with the express intent of using it ONLY for your class and no more
> than LESS THAN ONE CHAPTER for any given text.
>
> Thus, this semester I used LESS THEN WHOLE CHAPTER  from several intro
> texts. I prefer not to advertise here. But some of the "big sellers" did
> not even make a single chapter for me!
>
> Another chapter to be careful with is Social BTW. Find and read some of
> the
> critiques by Griggs - the minimization  and white washing of Milgram that
> progressed historically; the focus on only ONE dramatic finding from the
> genuine body of work by Asch (in this case it was not Asch's doing) and a
> resounding critique of Zimbardo's prison study and it's shortcoming and
> why
> we should NOT extrapolate.
>
> I will happily share my readings off list. I also supplement with MANY
> articles. My focus is on debunking myths so I have readings for most of
> the
> popular ones that are quite accessible for students, for example a nice
> reading by Willingham on Learning Styles; a nice  reading on the Mozart
> effect, and so on.
>
> In an ideal world I would use the entire books from the series that
> Lilienfeld's 50 myths is in but in reality students can't read all of
> those
> books and the core readings in the field.
>
> And, BTW, I am NOT AT ALL enamoured of the NOBA readings; I have used
> about
> 6-8 of them this year but hesitantly. For example, I used the Affective
> Neuroscience chapter for emotion, but I"m not crazy about over-relying on
> neuroscience. I did like their point about shared brain structures and
> circuits with shared but also unique structures that seem to underlie
> different emotions, etc. The idea that no brain area is unique identified
> with any emotion (anyone remember the amygdala from the 1970's???)
>
> Annette
>
>
>
> From: "Joan Warmbold" <jwarm...@oakton.edu>
> Date: Wed, 29 Nov 2017 12:18:56 -0600 (CST)
> X-Message-Number: 3
>
> Annette and Gerald,
>
> I couldn't agree more with you both, which is why I never teach theories
> of personality in my psychology 101 course--or teach the course itself.
> Same for emotions.  Are you required to follow the standard content found
> in our textbooks or can you develop your own course content based on
> relatively recent and far more sound scientific principles?
>
> For most Psychology 101 students, this is the only course they will take
> within our field.  After teaching this course for over 10 years, I gained
> the confidence to limit my focus on what is scientifically valid and of
> real use to my students and I tell my students such from the get-go.  We
> can't depend on our textbooks to keep up-to-date as clearly their goal is
> to please as many potential consumers as possible which apparently
> translates into maintaining the status quo.
>
> I'm soon going with NOBA so will have the opportunity to have more input
> into the content of my Psych 101 text.  Two prime modifications will be to
> include a section on epigenetics, a fascinating and very relevant field
> for understanding behavior that few if any texts include, as well as very
> applied section on how principles of psychology provide advice for
> developing meaningful relationships and effective parenting strategies.
>
> Joan
> jwarm...@oakton.edu
>
> Annette Kujawski Taylor, Ph.D.
> Professor, Psychological Sciences
> University of San Diego
> 5998 Alcala Park
> San Diego, CA 921210
> tay...@sandiego.edu
>
> ---
> You are currently subscribed to tips as: jwarm...@oakton.edu.
> To unsubscribe click here:
> http://fsulist.frostburg.edu/u?id=49240.d374d0c18780e492c3d2e63f91752d0d&n=T&l=tips&o=51804
> or send a blank email to
> leave-51804-49240.d374d0c18780e492c3d2e63f91752...@fsulist.frostburg.edu



---
You are currently subscribed to tips as: arch...@mail-archive.com.
To unsubscribe click here: 
http://fsulist.frostburg.edu/u?id=13090.68da6e6e5325aa33287ff385b70df5d5&n=T&l=tips&o=51805
or send a blank email to 
leave-51805-13090.68da6e6e5325aa33287ff385b70df...@fsulist.frostburg.edu

Reply via email to