Thanks to all who have responded, and so promptly, to my queries about the
Psych-Law course. The consensus seems to be that the Wrightsman text is
still the standard for such a course. I'm a bit concerned with its length
given the course's time frame, but with some selective coverage, perhaps...
I also appreciate the other suggestions, syllabi, and other assistance
offered and provided. If I don't get in touch with each of you, please
accept this blanket thank you and know that your suggestions are
appreciated and utilized.
Thanks,
David W.
>On 2 Dec 99, at 11:03, David Wasieleski, Ph.D. wrote:
>
>> For three years I've begged and cajoled my Dept Head to allow me to
>> teach a course in Forensic Psychology (or Psychology and the Law, the
>>
>> 2. Any suggestions for such a course in general in terms of
>> coverage or activities? 3. Any suggestions for teaching a course in
>> that time frame at all? (maybe this will generate several threads or
>> none, but have at it).
>
David Wasieleski, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Valdosta State University
Valdosta, GA 31698
912-333-5930
http://chiron.valdosta.edu/dtwasieleski
"What do you want for Christmas, Crow?"
"I want to decide who lives and who dies."
"uhh... I don't know about that."
--MST3k