Psych Course Heads Research Project By JOHN DENNY Emerald Staff Writer A research program designed to distinguish personality char acteristics which tend to make college students learn more ef fectively through one type of instructional format than an other is currently being conduct ed through the University’s In stitute for College Teaching. The project is based on the as sumption that no single college instructional procedure will be best for all students, but that there is an interaction between the personality of a student and the optimal method of teaching him. Research is done with data col lected from personality question naires, comprehensive examina tions, and scholastic records of nearly 900 University students. Much of the data was collected last spring from students enroll ed in two psychology courses which could be taken as a com pletion of the University General Psychology sequence. The two experimental courses. Personality and Individual Dif ferences and Developmental Psy chology, were of approximately the same level of difficulty. Different Methods Used Four teaching methods were used in different sections of both courses: • One group of students were taught through traditional lecture instruction with frequent quizzes. Students in this group met twice each week for lecture and once each week for sectional instruc tion. This group had four quizzes, which accounted for 40 per cent of their grade. • A second group also met twice each week for lecture and once each week for sectional in struction. This group had four papers based on text material due during the term, instead of four quizzes. The papers count ed for 40 per cent of the course grade. • A third method was a self study, frequent quiz form of in struction. Students met only once each week for sectional instruc tion and did not have scheduled lectures. Four quizzes adminis tered during the term made up 40 per cent of a student’s grade • A fourth, and the least structured of the experimental teaching methods, was a self study, frequent paper form of instruction. Students met once each week for sectional instruc tion, and they also had no sched uled lectures. The students were required to complete four pa pers based on text readings dur ing the term. The four papers counted as 40 per cent of a stu dent's grade for the course. Students in all eight of the experimental groups (four groups in each of the two General Psy chology courses) were given a Folk Society Presents An Alfresco Festival There will be a four-hour open-j air festival of jazz, poetry, flam-1 enco, and folk-song at 5 pm. Wednesday on the Student Un ion Terrace. Budget... (Continued from page 1) Goldschmidt said that you can’t expect X hours of work from a person and not pay him for that amount of work. In other business, the Commit tee: • Approved salaries of $678 each for the SU Directorate Sec retary and the SU Board Secre tary. • Approved a 5>o,uuu increase in the Student Union Budget for Summer Assistants. Under this program, the ASUO President, SU Board Chairman, and SU Di rectorate Chairman are given free room and board in the SU for 20 hours of work a week in the SU during the summer. This in crease would allow the ASUO vice president to be included in the program. Jack Cross, SU director and committee member, said that this program gave these students a chance to learn more about the workings of the SU and by al lowing them to go to summer school, helped to reduce academic pressure. • Approved a $1,300 request for the Ore-Nter, a booklet about the University and student activi ties which is sent to all incoming freshmen. • Heard a request from the Migratory Labor Program for $5,000. The program heard last week from the U.S. Office of Pub lic Health that its request for $30,000 to operate the program was turned down. PATRONIZE YOUR • ADVERTISERS • The festival, wnicn is an out growth of the University Folk Society’s Friday concerts which began a few weeks ago, will be an experiment in alfresco culture. Jazz wll be provided by the Fes tival Jazz Sextet, flamenco by Bob Clifton, and folk-songs by regular performers at the Folk Society’s Bottom-of-the-Bowl concerts. Poets reading their own work or the work of others include * Ralph Salisbury, Steve Tudor, ! Rafael Gonzalez, and Lawson In ada, all from the English depart ment. Some of the poetry will be given instrumental backing. If the venture is a success, it is hoped there will be an annual Festival continuing next year with a more ambitious program. Campus Briefs Alpha Lambda Delta initiation will be held tonight on the second floor of Gerling Any girl wishing to take the swimming test to fulfill her requirement may sign up in the woman’s PE main office in Gerlinger for the tests which will be given at 4 p.m. today and Wednesday. Canoe Fete Barrel deposit refunds can now be picked up by all living organizations in the SU Business Office. Skull and Dagger members, both old and new, will meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday in the SU. Room number will be posted. Latin American students will hold their last meeting of the school year at 7:30 p.m. today in the SU. The women’s softball intramural cham pionships game will be played today at 5 p.m. on Gerlinger Field. Vying for the championship will be Off-Campus, winner of the Tuesday night league, and Chi Ome ga, winner of the Thursday night league. A film of the championship game of the Women’s Softball International Series, in which Australia beat the United States’ en try 1-0, will be shown in the social room of Gerlinger Hall at 4 p.m. today. Oregon Christian Fellowship will meet at 9 p.m. today in the SU. The topic will be “Emotional and Personal Problems—Some Practical Helps.” Wildon Ferry, a coun selor from Salem, is the speaker. There will be an important meeting of Theta Sigma Phi members, and all those students interested in joining, at 6 :30 today in the SU. Room number will be posted. WHAT WILL YOU WITH YOUR PERSONAL POSSESSIONS WHEN SCHOOL IS OUT? PACKING—By experts SHIPPING—One piece or van load—anywhere STORAGE—Reasonable low rates Agent for North American Van Lines Eugene Moving & Storage Co. 260 Ferry Street Phone 345-0151 comprehensive midterm and a comprehensive final examination. The exams together accounted for 60 per cent of students' course grades. All students enrolled in third term General Psychological cour ses completed 30 structured per sonality, motivated, and attitude inventories. The inventories now provide over 500 personality scale scores for each individual. The inventories were distributed at section meetings and were com pleted both at the meetings and in students’ homes. The inventor ies did not count toward a stu dent's grade. Classes of Criteria Four broad classes of criteria were obtained from each student in each of the two courses. • A gross measure of morale. Students filled out anonymous questionnaires, expressing their degree of satisfaction with the course, at six times during the term. • Indication of satisfaction with the course as a whole and with each aspect of course instruc tional format. Students were asked to fill out a 52-item inven tory dealing with their satisfac tion with the course. These rat ings, taken at the end of the term, were made, in part, to dis cover any general discrepancy in course evaluations under anon ymous as compared to non-anony mous conditions. • A measure of tho amount of course-related but non-graded ex tracurricular reading done by a student during a course. This questionnaire was administered after the course final examina tions. Twenty Scientific American reprints were made available to all students as extracurricular reading material. All examination questions hav ing to do with the reprints were pretested on samples of students from another college where the students were required to read the material. Questions were worded so that they would be easy for students who had read reprints, but difficult for students who had done no extracurricular reading. • Knowledge of course con tent. This criteria was measured by the mid-term and final com prehensixe examinations. Both objective and essay questions were included in the comprehen sive examinations. This research project is one of the first studies of college instruction which has measured the effectiveness of various teach ing methods in motivating stu dents to carry out extracurricu lar study. Unique Program The program is unique in that it is the first college teaching study which has included a com prehensive battery of personality measures. Also being considered in the research program are college ap titude scores, cumulative GPA, and course grades received in pre vious General Psychology cour ses. Currently, research data is be ing prepared for computer analy sis. and University records arc being checked to obtain relevant information on past high school nnd college performance. Some of the results of the re search program will be known next fall. The average grade of students enrolled in each of the experi mental teaching classes was ap proximately the same for ull eight sections. This had been the case in past research programs and was an expected result in the present program. It is the personality character istics of individuals in the top of their experimental groups that this research program is attempt ing to identify. If, in the current study, sim ilar personality traits are found to be common to individuals learning most effectively through a specific method, the results ! of the research program will undergo further study and will possibly bo applied, in practice, to grouping students Into more homogeneous classes, each of which might profitably be taught by some different instructional process. Contributors of this research project include I,cwis R. Gold berg, research director and course instructor; Edwin S. Shl man, Gale H. Roid, and Stephen G. Ashton, research assistants; Miss Judith Gibbs, secretary; Wil liam A Bricker, Leslie A. Davi son, and Velio Sermat, course instructors; Raymond Barnett, Richard R. Jones, Miss Charlotte Rui, and Miss Audrey Skaife, teaching assistants. The research program is being funded through July 1 by the University through its institute for college teaching. Presently the program is requesting funds from the Office of Education for the continuance of work after July 1. Frosh Soon Allowed To Live Off-Campus The University Office of Stu dent Affairs will initiate an ex perimental program in off-campus living for a small number of un married freshmen men entering the University in the fall of 1966. The program is being under taken as part of the University's continuing evaluation of its pres ent housing policies. The mount ing pressure of student enroll ment is causing the University to examine carefully the educational advantages that have been so often claimed for residence hall living. While the case often made for residence hall living is that it makes it possible for students to become easily integrated into the academic life of the University, there is little real evidence as to the actual effects of residence hall living. The freshmen who will be al lowed to live off campus next fall will be chosen at random from those who have parental permis sion to do so. Those chosen will be permitted to take up residence in approved housing not affiliated with the University. Though living off campus, the students will have available to them all counseling and advising services the Office of Student Af fairs regularly provides. The results obtained will serve as a guide for future housing policy. . . . two fine locations Pancake Restaurant 6 Blocks from Campus the BEST pancakes also Hamburgers Steaks — Chicken Shrimp — Salads Open 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Open Sundays 652 E. Broadway Parkside Lounge Quiet, relaxing dining . . . the finest food in town. 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