PROGRAMME SPECIFICATION PROGRAMME SPECIFICATION Programme title: BSc Psychology Final award (BSc, MA etc): BSc (where stopping off points exist they should be detailed here and defined later in the document) UCAS code: C800 (where applicable) Cohort(s) to which this programme specification is applicable: 2008 onwards (e.g. from 2015 intake onwards) Awarding institution/body: University College London Teaching institution: University College London Faculty: Brain Sciences Parent Department: Division of Psychology and Language Sciences (the department responsible for the administration of the programme) Departmental web page address: (if applicable) http://www.ucl.ac.uk/psychlangsci/ (Main Site) https://moodle.ucl.ac.uk/course/view.php?id=21783 (UG site) Method of study: Full-time Full-time/Part-time/Other Criteria for admission to the programme: Length of the programme: A*AA-AAA at A-level or equivalent. Subjects to include at least one, preferably two science-based subjects (Psychology is acceptable) or Mathematics. 3 years (please note any periods spent away from UCL, such as study abroad or placements in industry) Level on Framework for Higher Education Qualifications (FHEQ) (see Guidance notes) Relevant subject benchmark statement (SBS) (see Guidance notes) Brief outline of the structure of the programme and its assessment methods: (see guidance notes) Advanced Level (Level 6) Psychology http://www.qaa.ac.uk/Publications/InformationAndGuidance/Pages/S ubject-benchmark-statement-Psychology.aspx http://www.ucl.ac.uk/psychlangsci/students/prospective/UG/UBSPSY SING05 Board of Examiners: Name of Board of Examiners: Board of Examiners in Psychology Professional body accreditation (if applicable): British Psychological Society Date of next scheduled accreditation visit: 2015 EDUCATIONAL AIMS OF THE PROGRAMME: 1. To educate our students in systematic, scientific thinking and argumentation about human beings and human problems informed by world-class research and taught by world-class faculty 2.To provide our students with leading-edge experimental, empirical and statistical/computational tools so they can develop and evaluate psychological ideas 3.To provide a challenging and supportive intellectual environment that is international and culturally diverse 4.To develop the intellectual potential of our students so that they can become reflective and creative professional psychologists or psychologically-informed professionals in other careers PROGRAMME OUTCOMES: The programme provides opportunities for students to develop and demonstrate knowledge and understanding, qualities, skills and other attributes in the following areas: A: Knowledge and understanding Knowledge and understanding of: 1. All relevant areas of modern scientific psychology including: Biological foundations of behaviour, perception learning and memory, thinking and language, personality and intelligence, social psychology, historical and conceptual issues and developmental psychology. 2. Research design and quantitative methods Teaching/learning methods and strategies: Our teaching covers the spectrum of psychological ideas with an emphasis on the experimental, cognitive and neuroscientific aspects of the discipline. Our strategy is to ensure in-depth coverage of the key areas of modern psychology using core examples in years 1 and 2. Year 1 and 2 provide a rigorous foundation for the enormous breadth of choice available to students in year 3 of the course. We use a wide range of delivery methods: Statistical, computational and experimental methods are taught in practical classes. Formal lectures are supplemented by teaching in smallsize seminar groups. We aim to increase the active learning component of lectures and to ensure good coverage of technical detail supported where appropriate by web-based exercises. A major site of exploration and integration of ideas is the weekly seminar. We have excellent procedures in place to induct and guide new seminar leaders and we propose to further support seminar leaders in their tasks sing a variety of methods including IT. Learning: Our strategy encourages students to assume responsibility for their own learning from the start and to collaborate with others in learning We require students to comment and appraise other student’s essay work and to appraise their own efforts against formally defined criteria. Students work in small-groups to devise and run laboratory experiments in year 2. Seminars provide an opportunity to explore and to integrate ideas. We propose to explore ways to support and encourage this activity. A major goal of our programme is to develop our student’s capacity to carry out a fully-fledged research project from initial research and planning to execution and report. We view the project as a type of apprenticeship in research. We shall continue with our current strategy of stipulating experiments in year 1, allowing students to develop their own experiments under guidance in year 2, requiring them to undertake a small scale mini-project in year 2, followed by a fullyfledged project under guidance in year 3. Assessment: Formative assessment: We use weekly self-assessments as part of our statistics teaching. We encourage the use of in-course self-assessment. Students write essays as part of their weekly seminar programme and are provided with structured feedback on these. Their marks reflect the explicit criteria for each grade. Students also appraise their own essay efforts and those of their peers. Termly appraisals with the seminar leader based around the student profiles also provide an opportunity for formative assessment and for wider guidance. Summative assessment: Our principle summative assessments are yearly examinations of specific course-units. The majority of the examinations are essay-based, but some also have an MCQ element. Laboratory work is assessed on a continuous basis and statistical methods are assessed by termly assessments. In year 3 of the course one-quarter of the marks are assigned to the project. Outline feedback on first drafts is provided by supervisors. B: Skills and other attributes Intellectual (thinking) skills: Teaching/learning methods and strategies: able to: Lectures model the relevant skills in presenting their lectures. 1. engage in scientific argumentation 2. generate and appraise psychological hypotheses 3. critically evaluate the psychological literature both theoretical and experimental/empirical. Weekly seminars provide an opportunity for student to present and to discuss ideas with feedback from experienced members of staff as well as their own peers. Students are required to write a minimum of three essays each term and these are commented on by the member staff in terms of the quality of argumentation. Laboratory classes in years 1 and 2, together with the project in year 3, provide an opportunity to generate and test hypotheses and to integrate findings with the existing literature. Assessment: Formative assessment is provided via grades on essays written for the weekly seminar Laboratory reports in years 1 and 2 are commented on and assessed on a continuous basis. Outline formative feedback is also provided on first drafts on the year 3 project. Summative assessment is provided by written unseen examinations (the majority are essay-based, but some are a combination of essays and MCQs). C: Skills and other attributes Practical skills (able to): 1. use statistical packages for the analyses of data Teaching/learning methods and strategies: Statistical skills are taught in weekly practical classes using relevant psychological problems that students are required to solve 2. running laboratory-based experiments 5. using electronic resources ( e-journals, the world-wide web), word processing packages Skills in planning running and analyzing experiments are taught via laboratory-classes. In year 1 the teaching method involves the entire group of students performing the same experiments and being led through the planning, execution and interpretation stages. In year 2 students mainly work in small –groups to design their own experiments under guidance. In year 3 they work with a single supervisor in an apprenticeship-relation. 6. presenting materially orally in a seminar and in laboratory-groups with or without presentation aids such as power point. Effective writing and presentation skills are taught via the weekly seminars and background work for this requires the use of electronic media. Essays are routinely submitted using a word-processing package. 3. designing questionnaires 4. communicating effectively in writing 7. designing and executing a complete piece of innovative research Assessment: Two statistics assessments in each of the first two-years of the programme – each contains a multiple-choice (theory) component and a computer-based (practical: open-book) component. Students submit a minimum number of laboratoryreports (8 in year 1 and 5 in year 2. These are graded and commented upon so that students can learn continuously. Seminar essays are graded according to a comprehensive marking scheme and returned promptly to students. These provide a formative assessment for unseen written exams held at the end of each year. Seminar presentations are assessed informally during the term and students receive additional feedback on their overall seminar performance in individual meetings at the end of each term. The project is assessed in two stages: a project proposal and a final project report. D: Skills and other attributes Transferable skills (able to): 1. Study independently and efficiently 2. Think critically and write effectively 3. Analyze and appraise numerical data 4.Argue from a scientific standpoint: 5.Generate hypotheses and test these empirically 6.Collaborate with peers and others to achieve goals 7. Make effective use of IT (e.g., word processing packages, search engines, spreadsheets, statistics packages and other software). 8.Communicate confidently and effectively to both specialist and nonspecialist audiences 9. Reflect on their own learning and manage competing demands on their time. Teaching/learning methods and strategies: The student handbook and seminar leaders act as sources of guidance for effective study Library and IT resources are available to facilitate independent study The weekly seminar provides a key forum for honing thinking and writing skills Numeracy skills are formally taught in the statistics courses and are applied in research settings Psychological argumentation and scientific thinking are modeled and taught throughout the programme Weekly seminars facilitate the acquisition of interpersonal skills. In addition, in laboratory-classes in year 2 students are required to work in small groups in order to achieve their experimental goals. Seminars also facilitate the development of effective verbal communication skills We run courses in the use of statistics packages (SPSS, Minitab, Lisrel) and Matlab. Overviews of the software available are presented by one of the computing staff in the Department during induction week in year 1. Students are encouraged to reflect on their learning via the seminar and their personal tutorials and are required to learn to manage their time effectively by numerous deadlines for different kinds of work (e.g., essays, laboratory-reports, seminar presentations, project proposals and reports, unseen examinations). Assessment: Practical work –laboratory reports, statistics assessments Seminar essays and presentations Project reports Unseen examinations The following reference points were used in designing the programme: the Framework for Higher Education Qualifications: (http://www.qaa.ac.uk/en/Publications/Documents/Framework-Higher-Education-Qualifications-08.pdf); the relevant Subject Benchmark Statements: (http://www.qaa.ac.uk/assuring-standards-and-quality/the-quality-code/subject-benchmark-statements); (http://www.qaa.ac.uk/Publications/InformationAndGuidance/Pages/Subject-benchmark-statementPsychology.aspx) the programme specifications for UCL degree programmes in relevant subjects (where applicable); UCL teaching and learning policies; staff research. Please note: This specification provides a concise summary of the main features of the programme and the learning outcomes that a typical student might reasonably be expected to achieve and demonstrate if he/she takes full advantage of the learning opportunities that are provided. More detailed information on the learning outcomes, content and teaching, learning and assessment methods of each course unit/module can be found in the course handbook. The accuracy of the information contained in this document is reviewed annually by UCL and may be checked by the Quality Assurance Agency. Programme Organiser(s) Alastair McClelland Name(s): Date of Production: March 2003 Date of Review: October 2014 Date approved by Head of Division: October 2014 Date approved by Chair of Departmental Teaching Committee: Date approved by Faculty Teaching Committee: October 2014 November 2014