About

Department of Psychology

Beaven Hall
Phone: 508-793-2218
Fax: 508-793-3709
Chair: Mark Hallahan
Administrative Assistant: Laura C辞谤迟茅蝉

Psychology professor Danuta Bukatko teaches a class.

Psychology professor Danuta Bukatko teaches a class. 

Outstanding Faculty

The psychology department faculty represent a highly accomplished and diverse group of scholars who are widely known in their fields having received national awards and grants, and who share a dedication to mentoring students in their labs, courses and theses. The department is strenuously committed to providing the high level, individualized instruction for which the College is known.

Examining Mental Health-Related Topics

Faculty research and course offerings investigate cognitive or social/emotion disabilities such as social stigmatization, schizophrenia, obsessive compulsive disorder, autism, eating disorders, as well as caffeine and opioid abuse. This clinical emphasis is in line with the College鈥檚 Jesuit mission to help serve the wellbeing of others and allows students to integrate their interests in service with their academic program and potentially their post-graduate vocation.

Wide Range of Research Endeavors

The spirit of open inquiry at 51小黄车 encourages scholarly innovation, and many in the psychology department are actively engaged in work in many different subareas of the discipline. Currently, psychology faculty are involved in science education, the intersection of psychology and nutrition, neurobiology, Holocaust studies, adolescent development, complex systems, and health psychology, just to name a few.

Collaborative Teaching

Students also benefit from the faculty members鈥 involvement in collaborative teaching, from seminars in Montserrat, the College鈥檚 intensive first-year program that immerses students in richly layered living, learning and doing 鈥渃lusters,鈥 to honors seminars for upperclass students.

Student doing research
Intensive Introduction to Scientific Methodology

A notable set of course offerings within the department is the Statistics and Research Methods sequence, spread across both the fall and spring semesters, which provides an unusually intensive introduction to scientific methodology as well as an important site for students, relatively early in their academic careers at the College, to engage in independent research. Courses of this sort are common at other colleges and universities. Less common is the way the department has students pursue and present their own research, culminating in an end-of-year colloquium that brings them all together in an exciting rite of passage marking their entry into the role of psychologist. 

Student in a classroom
Interdisciplinary Curricular Opportunities

The psychology department’s curriculum embraces field's interdisciplinarity which allows our students to combine the psychology major with a number of other minors and majors. Many of our majors combine psychology with minors in Neuroscience and Education as well as double majors in Biology, Sociology, Philosophy, English and Political Science.

Additionally, psychology courses are available to students who have interdisciplinary majors in Neuroscience and Health Studies. Please note that the establishing of these interdisciplinary connections requires judicious planning and students should discuss their plans with their academic advisors as early as possible.

Computer Facilities 

One of two computer labs housed in the psychology department.
 

The psychology department uses state-of-the-art computer laboratories in the Integrated Science Complex. These facilities are designed to enhance collaborative interactions among students in the Statistics and Research Methods courses, as well as in courses such as Developmental Psychology, Perception and Social Neuroscience, and Cognition and Memory. 

Each computer lab is equipped with Dell PCs designated for student and faculty use. The computers are set up with all of the software that is commonly used on campus (e.g., Microsoft Office, Photoshop and Acrobat) as well as statistical programs that are used in the psychology department.

Minor in Neuroscience

Psychology majors interested in the brain mechanisms underlying behavior might consider pursuing an interdisciplinary minor in neuroscience. The minor draws on psychology, biology, and related disciplines that have lent insights and approaches to understanding the structure and function of nervous systems.

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