Ok sorry to be a p.i.t.a but... lol
I'm trying to piece this together. Because my book does seem to have *some* of the correct titles, I decided to see if I could find the others online, and some of them are available for public use/printing. I just printed a couple of the articles I found online, but then I realized the book has "questions" that the original article of course does not.
I found this thread;
http://www.degreeforum.net/excelsior-tho...379-a.html
On this forum, but it's old.
Are you currently taking the course?
If so, could you compare the Module 1 assignments to this?
It says "written assignment, answer all questions".
Which doesn't make a lot of sense to me, seems awfully vague, and there are quite a few questions in the Insights book I have corresponding with those articles.
If you could copy/paste the Module 1 assignment for me I would be forever in your debt!
I know I'm asking a lot but I'm desperate here! lol
copy/paste from that old thread , does it look like this still?
"Reading Assignment for Module 1
Baron, Branscombe, and Byrne, Social Psychology, chapters 1 and 3
Insights, pp. 1–53 and 79–99:
Arthur Aron and Elaine N. Aron, "What Is Psychology?" 1–10
Donelson R. Forsyth, "Social Psychology's Three Little Pigs," 11–12
Judson Mills, "A Procedure for Explaining Experiments Involving Deception," 13–19
Norbert Schwarz, "Self-Reports: How the Questions Shape the Answers," 20–34
Michael A. Smith and Brant Leigh, "Virtual Subjects: Using the Internet as an Alternative Source of Subjects and Research Environment," 35–46
Arthur Aron and Elaine N. Aron, "Social Psychologists Reflect on Their History," 47–53
S. E. Asch, "Forming Impressions of Personality," 79–87
Victoria Husted Medvec, Scott F. Madey, and Thomas Gilovich, "When Less Is More: Counterfactual Thinking and Satisfaction among Olympic Medalists," 88–96
Thomas J. Schoeneman and Daniel E. Rubanowitz, "Attributions in the Advice Columns: Actors and Observers, Causes and Reasons," 97–99
And your written assignment was:
Answer all questions.
Explain how variables such as social interactions, cognitive processes, environmental variables, cultural context, and biological factors shape what social psychology is all about and how it is practiced.
Choose one of the "cutting edge" issues discussed in the text, and explain its significance in modern social psychology.
Read the advice columns in several newspapers or magazines. Choose 3 to 5 situations that you personally found interesting. Why do you think the actors or observers in these situations behaved the way they did? In your answer, consider consensus, consistency, and the distinctiveness of the person's reactions.
"