
Advice to My Son, Who Is Starting College (from Your Dad, Who Happens to Be a Professor of Psychology)
Author’s note: I started this essay when my son graduated from high school. He is now a college senior. (Procrastination is a problem I need

Author’s note: I started this essay when my son graduated from high school. He is now a college senior. (Procrastination is a problem I need

There is a conundrum in teaching. We hold a stereotype that an excellent teacher is kindly, approachable, and openly supportive of students, yet some

Learning requires effort and is often difficult, but the exact relationship between learning, effort, and difficulty is complex and often misunderstood by both teachers

Author note: This essay is meant to be a bit tongue in cheek. Just to be clear: I am not advocating for academic dishonesty.
<p
I’m a professor of psychology, and I’ve taught courses in behavioral statistics and research methods my entire career. No one decides to major in

One of the strongest predictors of how easily and well a person will learn a topic is their prior knowledge about it. The more one

When my son was growing up, my wife and I bought memberships at the local science museum so we could take him there any time

No faculty member sets out to be a bad teacher—at least I hope not—but there are bad (or ineffective) teachers. I’m sure some of these

Psychology programs at large, research-focused universities often ask me to provide an external evaluation for a faculty member on a teaching-track faculty who are being

Psychologists and educators have studied learning for well over 100 years, and we still don’t know the specific conditions that result in learning. If we