I just finished looking over intro texts again because I tie my research to my 
intro text and want to be sure that it meets some important criteria for me.

The books you mention did not even make my final list after I browsed them--two 
of them pretty closely, one not so much.

They did NOT have a theme of critical thinking--see the Lilienfeld, et al book 
to see what I mean.
They did NOT have ANY refutation of misconceptions--see Lilienfeld, et al, 
Myers short text and E-Z Psych

The texts you are being asked to pick from are ALL encyclopedias. Students 
cannot possibly learn all of that information in one semester and remember even 
a fraction of it. Let alone learn to THINK about psychological information in 
the midst of all that rote memorization. That is unrealistic based on all the 
current research. After all, most of them have 3 of 4 other classes and jobs 
and a life, etc. It's 10-15 weeks, depending on your school, 2 or 3 days a week 
and the rest on their own. They don't know the field, they can't tell what is 
primary and what is secondary in importance. The good students will try to 
learn it all, the less than good ones will give up right about the time you hit 
biopsych.

My finalists were the more "essentials" editions, including Myers, Lilienfeld 
et al and EZ Psych. I then supplement on my own with primary readings from 
journals and "magazines" and book chapters. (My favorites books for short but 
sweet chapters right now are 50 myths and Mind Hacks and McBurney's little 
book.)

I know you probably can't go beyond the three you've been given, but if you 
could convince someone, you might look at Myers and Lilienfeld, et al. I think 
that of the 20 or so books my collaborator and I looked at we agreed that those 
two stood up head and shoulders above the rest in terms of readability, 
accuracy, what we really want students to get out of an intro psych class (how 
to separate psych science from psych fiction for the rest of their lives for 
all the new things that come along), and how to stay motivated to be a life 
long learner about psychology. Encyclopedias are great for some people, heck, 
I'm writing one this summer...and fall...and winter...well, that's another 
story, and I'm NOT your average intro psych student and probably wasn't back 
then either.

Annette

ps: that said, I'd rank them Plotnik, Coon and Ciccarelli in that order, 
apologies to those authors from my opinion. It's hard to be an author.

Annette Kujawski Taylor, Ph. D.
Professor, Psychological Sciences
University of San Diego
5998 Alcala Park
San Diego, CA 92110
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
________________________________
From: Edgar Johns [[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, July 03, 2011 7:40 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: [tips] Intro Psych Textbooks

This fall, I will be teaching Introductory Psychology.

The department requires one of three texts:
1. Plotnik & Kouyoumdjian (2011) "Introduction to Psychology (9th Ed.)"
Wadsworth.
2. Coon & Mitterer (2011) "Psychology: Modules for Active Learning (12th
Ed.)" Wadsworth.
3. Ciccarelli & White "Psychology (3rd Ed.)" Prentice Hall.

I'm leaning toward Plotnik but was wondering if I could get some opinions
about any of these texts.

I'll be teaching at an urban/suburban community college.

Thanks.
Edgar Johns
---------
International Consultants for Educational Excellence
(734) 564-4964
www.intl-education.com<http://www.intl-education.com/>




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