Dear Colleagues,

As one of his APA presidential initiative, Phil Zimbardo created a task force,
which Bob Bjork and I have agreed to co-chair, that he charged with creating a
"web-based compendium of psychological research" that has make positive
contributions to the lives of individuals or society.

As part of this project, I�d like to invite you all to consider: What
psychological research displays the importance of our science to society and
to our students?  What impacts of psychological science make you proud?  What
might help the general public appreciate the importance of funding psychology?
 (Note that the emphasis here is not on what are psychology�s greatest
insights so much as its significant practical impacts.)

Already, people have pointed to research that contributed to school
desegregation, to Sesame Street programming, to improved police lineup
procedures, to airline crew training, to reduced teen smoking, and to
effective treatments for specific disorders.  See www.psychologymatters.org
for a preliminary peek at the proposed website format, and some sample entries
and categories.  We're aiming for about 100 examples in all, each with its own
web page.

Think about your own subfield, if you would.  Where has it made a difference
in people�s lives or in public policy?  (What landmark research, and practical
result, would you point to?)

I�m hoping that Tipsters might find this an enjoyable summer exercise . . .
perhaps a topic for conversation over coffee with colleagues.  You�re welcome
to reply to me, but I�d also suggest this as a nice topic for our collegial
brainstorming and conversation.

Cordially,

Dave Myers
www.davidmyers.org


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