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(Document started on 12 Apr 2008.)
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Steve Draper, installed at http://www.psy.gla.ac.uk/~steve/courses/pos1.html.
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By
Steve Draper,
Department of Psychology,
University of Glasgow.
This is my page to hold bits about our two DACE (adult education) courses
about the psychology of happiness, which are based on the fairly new field of
Positive Psychology. Versions of them ran twice each in the period 2008-10,
but are not currently running.
("We" are
Emily Cutts,
Quintin Cutts,
and Steve Draper.
The
DACE web pages will hold official descriptions of them, how to
enrol, etc. On this page I discuss (with less of a word limit) what I think
these courses are about.
The two courses are:
- The psychology of happiness: a balanced perspective to increasing
personal well-being. (Oct-Nov 2009)
- The psychology of happiness: learning from other disciplines. (Jan-Mar 2010)
The first deals with things that it has been shown an individual can do to
make themselves happier, together with practical exercises on this. The
second deals with how others' effectiveness, happiness and health can be
improved by surprisingly simple interventions.
The
DACE web page for the course holds the
official aims and objectives for it.
There are three kinds of reason why people might wish to do this course.
- New research.
Anyone interested in research findings in positive psychology: a hot new topic
in academic psychology that is not yet part of most undergraduate curricula.
Whether you're an undergraduate wanting a bit about some interesting new stuff
not yet in regular courses, or a non-psychologist wanting to hear about some
of the interesting bits of the subject.
- Self-help.
People interested in being happier i.e. a "self help" approach. What is
different here is that the exercises on this course are all based on
effects that have been established by research published in reputable
scientific journals.
- Student PDP.
Undergraduates taking "personal development" seriously as embracing a
whole life approach, in which studying is one integrated part of their lives.
Narrow and partial approaches to PDP (personal development planning) treat it
as about career preparation, or study skill training, but a fuller view is
that it is about organising one's whole life, and developing a view on the
place of work and study within that. An important part of this course is the
findings, which certainly apply to students as much as to anyone, that
happiness depends on activities that are meaningful (not just pleasurable); and
that we need activities that are both enjoyable now and serve long term plans
as well; and that being rushed due to poor time planning is no way to be
happy.
The content of this course:
There are three kinds of content this course offers its students:
- Concepts and evidence on what has been shown to make people happier e.g.
writing gratitude letters.
- Gaining some understanding of the nature of that evidence and its strengths
and weaknesses. This is in fact learning something of the underlying nature of
psychological research.
- Personal practical exercises based on the concepts that you can try
yourself.
Time: Wednesdays 6-8pm, 7th Oct 2009 for 8 weeks
Place: Lecture theatre A, Boyd Orr building.
Price £60.50
Course code GC114
How to enrol
Provisional list of topics/papers covered
DACE page that will list this and other psychology courses
official aims and objectives for it.
(
Moodle for this course )
Time: Wednesdays 6-8pm, 13th Jan 2009 for 8 weeks
Place: Lecture theatre B, Boyd Orr building.
Price £60.50
Course code GC115
How to enrol
DACE page that will list this and other psychology courses
official aims and objectives for it.
(
Moodle for this course )
Tal D. Ben-Shahar's Harvard course on Positive Psychology
old
His website
My other page on
stuff related to Positive Psychology
Centre in Glasgow for confidence and well being
Tutor
head page
Tutor handbook (PDF)
Submitting a course proposal
Education Moodle
Moodle help: Hooi Ling ext.3024 h.eng@educ.gla.ac.uk
Web site logical path:
[www.psy.gla.ac.uk]
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