Title: WebCT
1WebCT
- Information
- Timetable information
- Teaching materials
- Instant unit updates
- Communication
- Message boards
- E-mail facilities
- Chat rooms
http//odl.mmu.ac.uk/
2Important concepts that you will be examined on
- Newspaper
- Video
- Note paper
- Pen refills
- Water
- Cereal
- Apples
- Cigarettes
This information will not be available on the web
3DOH!
- At the first session of night school the
instructor mentions that his wife has recently
died. Homer Simpson asks if that will be in the
test and when told that it will not, he crosses
out the words dead wife. There are HEIs where
work is only done if it will be graded and if the
grades will count. - (Knight, 2000245)
4Locus of expertise
- Teacher
- Knowledge rich
- Student
- Knowledge poor
- Teaching
- Transferring knowledge from teacher to student
Banking System of Education
5This is the really important point to understand
- Post-structural, de-colonialist existentialism is
shifting paradigmatically a new commodification
and reification of structurally bounded and
existentially grounded conceptual spaces that
evoke a modern day crisis in the use of SSRTs
and PPLs within Psychology as a whole. - Please consult your DDT56Rs for more information.
6Jargon
Jargon is a marvelous way to convey a lot of
information to the knowledgeable. It is also a
superb way to intimidate the uninitiated. Why do
you suppose it was developed? Kevin Throop
Jargon
7Societal Psychology
- The politics and power of knowledge
8Pedagogy of Poverty
- Haberman (1991) has identified a typical style
of teaching that he labels the pedagogy of
poverty. It consists of a one-way form of
communication between teachers and students
wherein the teacher issues information,
directions, assignments, tests, homework, and
grades and attempts to gain student compliance
through close monitoring of student behaviour and
punishment, if necessary. - (Oxley, 2000578)
9Most students entering the new world of the
academy are in an equivalent position to those
crossing the borders of a new countrythey have
to deal with the bureaucracy of checkpoints, or
matriculation, they may have limited knowledge of
the local language and customs, and are alone.
Furthermore, the students position is akin to
the colonised where the experience of
alienation arises from being in a place where
those in power have the potential to impose their
particular ways of perceiving and understanding
the worldin other words, a kind of colonising
process. (Mann, 200111)
10Social Constructionism
- 1) A willingness to make explicit the implicit
assumptions embedded in our most sacred and taken
for granted concepts - 2) All knowledge is socially produced and
therefore can never be value free interests,
however implicit, are always being served. - 3) There is an inescapable relationship between
knowledge and power. - Cosgrove McHugh, 2000817
it is always possible to take apart an
intellectual system and trace its component parts
to the interests of certain social
groups (Parker, 1999)
11Core themes of our course
- Social stratification
- Symbolic interactionism
- Culture
- Community
- Social institutions and power
- Social capital
- Rules and rituals
- Health inequalities
12(No Transcript)
13Power is
14Myth 1Mental Illnesses have Medical Markers
- AFTER 150 years of intensive psychological
research - There are no reliable biological or physical
markers for 'mental illness. - There are no biological or physiological
differences between people who do and do not have
a 'mental illness. - There are no tests or scans that can show a
person 'has' schizophrenia, depression or mania. - (Boyle,1996,1999, 2002)
Who benefits from this myth?
15Myth 2Psychological Problems have Psychological
Causes
Main causes of poor mental health are
- socio-political
- (discrimination, oppression, social exclusion)
- socio-economic
- (poverty, un/underemployment, poor housing)
Who benefits from this myth?
16Myth 3Individual psychological treatment is
effective
- Few psychological problems have psychological
solutions - Social, political and economic rather than
uniquely medical or psychological interventions
are needed
Who benefits from this myth?
17Myths 4Psychologists are the experts
- Psychologists are rarely more effective and
sometimes less effective than non-psychologists
in offering psychological support - (Cowen, 1982)
Who benefits from this myth?
18References
- Boyle, M. (1996). Diagnosis, science and power.
Asylum, 10, 16-19. - Boyle, M. (1999). Diagnosis. In Newnes, C.,
Holmes, G., Dunn, C. (eds), This is Madness A
critical look at psychiatry and the future of
mental health services, Ross-on-Wye, PCCS Books. - Boyle, M. (2002). Schizophrenia A scientific
delusion? (2nd edition). London Routledge - Cosgrove, L., McHugh, M.C. (2000). Speaking or
ourselves feminist methods and community
psychology. American Journal of Community
Psychology, 28,6, 815-838. - Cowen, E.L. (1982). Help is where you find it
four informal helping groups. American
Psychologist, 37,4, 385-395. - Knight, P.T. (2000). The value of a
programme-wide approach to assessment. Assessment
and Evaluation in Higher Education, 25,3,
237-251. - Mann, S.J. (2001). Alternative perspectives on
the student experience alienation and
engagement. Studies in Higher Education, 26,1,
7-19. - Parker, I. (1999). Critical psychology critical
links. Radical psychology, 1,1. on-line
www.yorku.ca/faculty/academic/danaa