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[L. Ashburn-Nardo] You know, if you think about just a layperson and what they spend
most of their time thinking about its people. So as a social psychologist, in particular,
you know I can’t think of a discipline that you know could be more relevant to our everyday
lives. Understanding people and why we do the things we do, understanding behavior and
thought processes, those questions in and of themselves are really exciting.
[D. Appleby] Psychology is the scientific study of behaviors and mental processes. Behaviors
and mental processes is what we do, what we do, and what our friends do, and what our
loved ones do. And in order to be able to say, I think that I have fun with psychology,
what that means is that I’m starting to understand things a lot better about why I
do certain things.
Another aspect of our department, which is really quite different from a lot others is
that we have things called track concentrations. We have four of them. We have three graduate
programs and what this allows is for undergraduates to be taught by graduate faculty and to not
only get a degree in psychology, either a Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science degree
in psychology, but also to basically concentrate in a particular area of study. The four we
have right now, tracks, are clinical psychology, and industrial organizational psychology,
and the psychology of the dictions, and also behavioral neuroscience.
[M. Jeschke] It’s a really exciting major, because well it’s so broad, you can do lots
of different things with your Bachelors Degree. You can go on and work in human resources,
business, work for non-for-profit, or work in social services, or human services. Or
you can take the Graduate school path and go on in psychology, or we have students who
go on in law, medicine. We even have students who go on in other health disciplines, like
OT and PT. So there’s just a variety of things that a student can do in psychology.
[K. Rand] So, there’s opportunities to get involved, not only with working with people
and doing sort of perceptual experiments or social cognition experiments, but also working
with animals in the laboratory to understand sort of the psycho–physiology of processes
that are going on.
As you combine sort of the benefits of having a research focus big institution that has
lots of connections in an urban setting with medical school and the other professional
school and political and business enterprises in the city, but also that sort of small school
feel that the faculty are approachable. They’re not going to sort of gruffly tell you to go
away and leave them alone. Undergraduate education is one of our priority goals here.
[T. Allen] To be able to do research here at IUPUI, it’s just an amazing experience
that I think it’s just irreplaceable. I’ve currently, well, I will be starting with my
seventh research project, so I’ve had lots of opportunities. I’ve worked on many different
projects. They’ve ranged from looking at actually undergraduate research, like trying
to assess the benefits of it and all the way to looking at clinical treatments for integrated
dual disorders, and also looking at goals.
[L. Ashburn-Nardo] So, they know how to find information. They know how to make evidence
based decisions. They know how to look at data and decide, you know, what’s the best
course of action here, and that course of action doesn’t have to be in research. It
could be in counseling; it could be in teaching; it could be in business; it could be in a
number of different kinds of careers.
[M. Jeschke] We’ve created sort of a little community here and a little family, and we
have lots of opportunities for students to be engaged right here in psychology, which
will make this big environment seem small.
[K. Rand] It kind of has a small college atmosphere around here. We definitely know our students
by name and face.
[C. Frye] There’s an open door policy with every teacher that I have. Basically, if you
ever want to talk, if you have a question, if you just want to stop in and chat with
someone about anything, there’s always an open door policy, and you can always walk
in at anytime and ask any question. They’re very open, and they never make you feel like
you’re asking a dumb question, even though you might be asking a dumb question.
[J. Guare] I really found that I love being in the classroom. I like working with students
in an educational mode like the classroom. It gives me a chance to get them excited about
material maybe they haven’t been exposed to before. It gives me a chance to explain
things to them in ways that maybe they haven’t heard before, and just the interaction with
the students I find very rewarding.
[A. Barnes] I mean, it’s really the best deal for the experience you’re going to
gain. With the psychology department, the reason why I don’t feel like I’m a number
is because the faculty are really good advocates. I haven’t really needed an advocate in the
sense that I’ve gotten in trouble or I’ve had issues, it’s more so when I do things,
they get recognized.
[C Frye] The psychology students at IUPUI are actually a pretty tight group. Since I’ve
been here, I’ve actually really found kind of a niche, if you will. At IUPUI, the students,
we all know each other in the school of science, especially psychology.
The one thing about IUPUI that I like more than anything else is how informative IUPUI
is. I feel like I’ve been hand fed exactly, “okay, you want to succeed? Here’s the
formula for you to succeed.”
[T. Allen] I think that IUPUI has, I think it’s just the environment here, the opportunities
that are available, and really just, I think the faculty and the academics really make
this school.
This, it’s just, coming from a different university, and then also having an experience
here, It’s just, I think this experience is so much richer, and you just gain so much
more knowledge and hands-on experience that I just don’t know, I don’t know if you
can gain that at other universities.
[J. Guare] We really are strong on undergraduate education and training. We have lots of resources
available to students. I think the faculty are committed to teaching. They’re also
committed to research as well, and the blending of their research and teaching is a wonderful
mix for students to learn about.
We have other resources as well. We have a good advising program, so undergraduate students
can get help. I think as their trying to figure out, “what do I want to do, what courses
do I want to take,” these kinds of things, there’s just a very rich environment.
[J. Cahall] I think it all starts with the people. I mean, I think anywhere that’s
the case, and I think that the people here I think that their work speaks for itself.
And, I think that the metrics of the school speak for itself too, but I think most of
all it’s the people, and I think that anyone who is a perspective student that gets the
chance to really interact with some of the faculty here or even some of the other, you
know, students or mentors, advisors, I think that they’re all outlets where the department
can really amplify you know its strengths. Recent Videos