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My profile as project supervisor
By
Steve Draper,
Department of Psychology,
University of Glasgow.
This page has recently been updated (27 Nov 2023).
My main web page and photo
This page is to hold my profile as a project (research dissertation)
supervisor on MSc courses.
(I am not currently supervising any of the undergraduate projects.)
Contact
To contact me email steve.draper@glasgow.ac.uk
My preferred times for meeting
are 2pm-6pm Mon, Thur, Fri, but other times can often be arranged.
Short outline for 2023-4
Research interests and methods
Quantitative, qualitative and mixed have been used in my projects.
Mindfulness, Green Space and Blue Space effects on wellbeing.
Learning and teaching in HE. (LTP -- the learning and teaching process)
Example projects
(Green space) Plants: comparing wellbeing effects from pot plants vs. a
view of trees and grass vs. no greenery in view.
(Learning and teaching) Feelings of belonging in education / or as changed
by various aspects of the LTP. There are many different aspects of feelings of
belonging: could these be compared?
(Wellbeing) Designing a survey of mental health self-maintainence habits:
comparable to how we heal ourselves from everyday cuts and bruises.
(Learning and teaching) Developing a workshop activity to train students
to talk on unprepared topics (as in interviews, rather than prepared talks).
I have such an activity but have NOT taken systematic measures of its success.
General background
My general interest is in education at university level: what makes a
difference to students' learning?
This involves general theories of education, not only teaching methods in HE.
Since student motivation is the biggest determinant of student learning, it
also involves motivation theories some of which appear in the cognitive
literature. Sometimes it is of interest to look at how students develop,
especially their learning skills -- some might see that as Developmental
psychology even though that tends to focus on young children.
Some aspects such as peer interaction are often seen as "social psychology":
again, education is an applied subject and must draw on whatever literature
give insight.
My
web pages as a whole
illustrate my range of interests within this.
I wrote 4 papers,
which indicate some particular interests.
There are some examples of such topics below.
Nowadays, I am particularly active in education in / about computer science
(see here),
in connection with the Centre for Computing Science Education (CCSE),
and will supervise projects in that area, and can probably get you access to
classes in that school.
I used to teach a course on
Positive Psychology. I still sometimes think of projects I want to
supervise in that area.
Recently I've supervised a number of projects on (see further down for more details):
- Mindfulness and mindfulness meditation (MF and MFM).
(Other staff who have supervised projects related to MF/MFM in recent years,
although not necessarily this year, include Heather Woods, Larry Barsalou,
Esther Papies, Lorna Morrow.)
- "Green space" phenomena
- "mHealth"
- I have supervised a number of projects on student procrastination.
However a better research question currently might be
to look at how students decide to do a learning activity at all. It is
traditional to think of this as about motivation as if this were high or low;
but in fact many things such as how to tell whether they are still on the
right track can be more powerful.
However I have quite often supervised projects in areas I knew nothing about,
if the student has come with a specific idea and does not require detailed
technical knowledge from me, but general support and someone to discuss their
ideas with. (An example was theory of mind in ravens in Edinburgh zoo;
another was drinking and sociability in sports club members vs. other
students; another was perceiving someone's personality traits from a photo of
their bag.)
In fact these have been some of the best projects I've supervised.
But I am NOT usually interested in supervising clinical psychology projects.
Below, any references I mention briefly can often be found in my
large list
of education-related references.
Specific topics 2022-2023
- There are plans for introducing classes in schools on "computational
thinking" for all pupils. This is a surprising initiative, to believe that
there is something of general intellectual value to someone who has never
programmed which could be taught. A project to test some of these ideas and
exercises on non-computer scientists would throw some light on this, and
interest researchers in the School of Computing Science as well as myself.
- I am interested in research on "spatial skills". A lot of work has shown
that students who show in tests that they have high spatial skills, tend to do
a lot better when studying science subjects (STEM). Futhermore, doing regular
exercises to practise spatial skills seems to increase their success as
students in these subjects. A project in this area would interest me,
especially if it developed a better test of spatial skills.
A paper on this area, with further references in it, is here:
https://doi.org/10.1145/3291279.3339414
- I have supervised several projects on
"Green Space" phenomena.
Student projects have now shown that pictures produce effects (so it
doesn't have to be actual physical exposure to nature); and that
Very Short Interventions (VSIs) can work.
One such is a
video less than 4 minutes long
which produced a significant improvement in some measures of mood: stress
reduction, and increase of positive emotion.
One project could be to test whether it is green (plants
or trees), or still water or flowing water or cliffs, hills, mountains? Is a
combination best? which elements are most powerful?
- A possible study would be to compare mindfulness meditation to green
space exposure in their effects. (Using both a variety of measures of mood
improvement; and of the lengths of time needed.)
Another project studied the benefits of "informal mindfulness", in this case
taking a shower in a mindful way.
- Learner motivation is generally thought to be a big factor in how much
they learn. Below age 7, children seem to learn without motivation in the
normal sense -- they learn as a side-effect of their activities.
But in university, they are not directly forced to do anything but control
their own time. "Motivation" of various types determines what they do and
for how long. Students typically change a lot over their years at university:
this is not a fixed property of each student. Many interesting studies can
be done on this.
- It is often said that "active learning" or various kinds of activity in
classes promotes learning. There is a literature on which activities do, and
which do not, in fact promote learning. Many novel studies on this could be
done, and I would be interested in projects in this area.
Specific topics 2021-2022
Specific topics 2020-2021
I have now supervised several projects on
"Green Space" phenomena.
However it seems clear both that it is fairly easy to
obtain SigDiff results in this area, AND that we still understand little about
what causes it (the colour, the "naturalness", the fact that most of us most of
the time seem interested but not stressed in such environments, .....)?
A recent project showed that pictures of nature show reliable
positive effects: actual nature exposure doesn't seem to be the heart of it.
- Very Short Interventions (VSI).
A student group recently showed that a
video less than 4 minutes long
could produce a significant improvement in some measures of mood: stress
reduction, and increase of positive emotion.
Could other short interventions do this?
- Positive effects of "green space" have been shown to work to different
degrees in still pictures, videos, CCTV (real pictures of what is happening
now), and through windows. How do these compare?
- Is it urban vs. "nature" pictures that matter OR is it how close to the
viewer is to the picture i.e. a view of a city from the top of a tower block is
quite dfferent from seeing a street at ground level e.g. through a ground
floor window. I.e. perhaps it is not "green" that matters at all,
but distance?
- If it is countryside that matters, then is it green (plants) or trees,
or still water or flowing water or cliffs, hills, mountains? Is a combination
best? which elements are most powerful?
Informing students about what they have to do on each course, or for each
assignment. How is this best done, from the student's point of viewpoint?
Should just the deadlines and final product be specified?
Or should a set of steps be laid out? Or several alternatives sets of steps
be given, so the student both has a plan given them, but also it is clear they
have some choice of plans? The project could produce alternatives for a
course, and survey students about which they think is best.
Student discussion (sometimes called "constructive interaction") has been
shown to improve learning by improving understanding. But we still know
little about how much students do, and what are the conditions under which it
improves learning.
A study of students learning computer programming.
Programming can be seen in three different ways: as a hobby, as about
reasoning carefully about how the program works, and as engineering: how to
write code that works to do a useful job, with plenty of safety factors that
will make it robust when used incorrectly or in difficult situations.
These three views cause some problems in courses that teach programming because
different students take naturally different views; courses usually allow only
one view; but students generally know all three are important.
Surveys of students about this could be useful to teachers and valuable to the
research literature.
Procrastination. I recently supervised two projects on this, and published
research is not in agreement. Is delaying finishing work always bad?
or can it be part of a beneficial plan? E.g. a student finishes her work
quickly; then pauses and does not submit it; then gets comments from other
people and improves it?
Specific topics 2016-2020
- Student discussion which benefits (deep) learning
There is a literature that shows that peer discussion (amongst students) under
specific conditions significantly improves their conceptual understanding.
I have a page under construction which outlines this area.
Ways discussion occurs:
- One possibility is to have artificially prompted student discussion
in facebook groups. I.e. only slightly artificial.
- Another is opportunistic, unplanned student discussion, especially
between students living together.
Types of study might be:
- Finding out more about how discussion currently occurs and how much there
is.
- In best conditions (friends living together?), how many CI discussions
per day?
And what promotes them?
- How best to launch them when you have the people and time i.e. the
opportunity?
- Finding out how to reliably create discussion.
- Digital delusions.
There are various very widespread misconceptions about how new technical
facilities e.g. facebook have completely changed behaviour in various ways (as
opposed to just being new means for old human activities).
The project would define a particular delusion, and then look for evidence for
and against there being a real, as opposed to perceived, difference.
- Team Based Learning (TBL).
Within the university several classes will be using this particular way of
teaching at university for the first time. There may be a chance to collect
data on how well this succeeds.
- Assessment by pairwise comparison.
Most marking by teachers is done as if any answer (e.g. an essay) can be
marked by an expert independent of any other. An old psychological theory
from Thurstone, however, sees such judgements as essentially comparative.
You can look at
a page with some rough notes on this.
Students too can mark such work (and learn from the process of doing so).
The project might look at how markers experience using the new method.
- Mindfulness.
- I feel that there are three different potential values to mindfulness (MF),
and that future work should try hard to distinguish them:
- Resolving and improving old, long-term mental attitudes and approaches.
- Whether MF is protective against new stresses (as in the "protective
factors" found against clinical depression by Brown & Harris (1978)
"Social origins of depression : a study of psychiatric disorder in women"
Link to library record).
- Its widespread use by a majority of users, particularly students, as ad
hoc self-medication to ward off stresses after they start to be felt; like
aspirin for fevers and aches.
- That should probably be compared to another good project topic:
Most people, perhaps all, spend a considerable amount of time (and often
money) each day repairing the day's mental damage e.g. by a drink before
dinner, eating after you get home and can relax enough to enjoy it, moaning to
friends or family, etc.
Little is known about such self-protective "maintainence" behaviour, either
for mental knocks, or from physical ones (small cuts and bruises, small strains
and sprains of joints and ligaments).
- A project might, for instance, do a survey of ad hoc mindfulness use
(whilst the literature seems to only report on 8 week courses as a minimum,
and so has lost touch with real (non-clinical) practice).
- Comparing MF, the green-space effect (see below), and "Flow".
- Many people, particularly students, use MF to relieve stress immediately.
But experts claim it trains skills that are then usable in future, and
protective. Few if any studies have actually measured both claims.
- Altruism.
Looking into the complexity of motivation; and still more, of decision-making,
when people decide whether to donate money or time (i.e. volunteering) for
charitable ends.
- mHealth: this refers to a fuzzy but important area, involving the
interaction of three things: increasing people's health and well-being;
whether action is done by or to the "patient";
exploiting modern gadgets and
ICT (information and communications technology).
I have a page, which is basically only a heap of pointers.
In 2014-5, I supervised two great MSc projects in this area, by students who
already had some experience in the area.
In 2015-6 I supervised a maxi on using mindfulness to combat test anxiety.
Mindfulness when delivered by a phone app. is part of mHealth; but is an
increasingly interesting topic in its own right (see the point above).
- Follow up, somehow, Luke Timmons' project, which showed that critical
thinking skill in undergraduates depended upon whom they lived with.
Here is a
summary of a talk on it; which has a link to his
full project report.
This suggests that opportunity for unplanned intellectual discussions may be a
crucial educational factor currently.
- A project on
James Flynn's ideas
on critical thinking or my interpretation of them as to do with thought
schemas skimmed from various disciplines, but which manage to apply much more
widely than just to that discipline.
It would require effort to convert his ideas into a psychology project.
Specific topics 2015-16
- Can pictures and/or emojis be successfully used instead of text for
computer passwords?
- Artificially prompted student discussion in facebook groups.
Look at this page which gives an ancient argument for how
discussion is essential for learning; and skim over
Draper (2009),
which gives some references on the literature on learner discussion. The
Miyake and the Howe references are particularly relevant for seeing how
discussion has been shown to stimulate learning.
- Following up the Opezzo paper showing how walking and Green space
independently promote "divergent thinking", a common test of creativity.
Opezzo, M. & Schwartz,F.L. (2014) "Give Your Ideas Some Legs: The Positive
Effect of Walking on Creative Thinking" Journal of Experimental Psychology:
Learning, Memory, and Cognition Vol.40 no.4 Jul 2014 pp.1142-1152
doi:10.1037/a0036577
- Shopping addiction, current mood, and ability to inhibit behaviour
appropriately.
- Exam anxiety, and ad hoc mindfulness exercises.
Specific topics 2014-15
- Student discussion.
There are 4 kinds of study, any of which I'd like to pursue.
- Naturalistic study of student discussion in the wild. I now believe that
we can't just ask students when they discussed some topic: their recall is
much too poor. So to find out how much discussion goes on, we need better
methods. Catch for instance, cases where a student tends to phone her mum and
bend her ear about the essay she's struggling with just now...
- Controlled experiment that establishes whether or not discussion is so
valuable, that it is worth reducing the revision time spent in re-reading,
reading, writing in order to get it.
- Compare the effects / effectiveness of learning designs that prompt
student discussion; and particularly how proactive students can be in
organising discussion instead of only responding to someone else.
- Generate rival learning activities and measure comparative effectiveness.
E.g. self-testing has a strong literature (Roediger; Karpicke) on how much
more effective it is compared to simple re-reading as a learning and/or
revision strategy. Is it better or worse than discussion?
- Look at this page which gives an ancient argument for how
discussion is essential for learning; and skim over
Draper (2009),
which gives some references on the literature on learner discussion. The
Miyake and the Howe references are particularly relevant for seeing how
discussion has been shown to stimulate learning.
- Mindfulness training and education.
- Green exposure: does simply being outdoors,
e.g. in a park, measurably increase well-being, reduce restlessness, increase
ability to concentrate? (I have a student for this.)
- Develop student exercises: learning through experiential exercises.
- Research a grand developmental hypothesis:
The argument is that all education and especially HE, is a process of getting
better and better at interacting with people who disagree with you.
Instead of only collaborating with people who share your views, you learn to
tolerate and indeed interact productively with, those who differ more and more
from you. This would explain how peer discussion isn't just helpful instantly
in improving your ideas, but also changes you more profoundly.
- neo-Vygotskian ideas: on how we learn through
apprenticeships to new kinds of conversation.
Specific topics 2013-14
A lot of my interest currently is focussed on discussion, and its role in
student learning. I have a
page on discussion.
Projects on this might include:
- A study of student use of "podcasts": audio recordings of lectures.
Issues include: how many value them? Is this as insurance or anyway? Are they
used instead of lectures, as well as and during the course, only at revision?
Where are they listened to (e.g. while jogging, commuting, with full attention
at a desk?). Are they just listened to straight through, or with frequent use
of pause, fast forward, etc.?
- A survey of how much discussion students actually do anyway. For
instance, anecdotes suggest that students who don't have friends who discuss
academic things, may phone up their mums to blether about their current
essay's content.
- With a student, I ran a workshop to give students practice in oral
responses to questions about psychology to improve their fluency. We failed
to record a significant effect, yet all the participants we spoke to felt
strongly that it was beneficial, both for fluency and for improving their
understanding and confidence about the academic content.
I'd like to get to the bottom of this.
- There is some literature on teaching students how to discuss
productively. We could try and test something like this.
Specific topics 2012-13
- Producing a test for students of qualitative understanding of psychology.
Another way of putting this is: can we invent a simple method that students
should apply to every bit of psychology they read, that summarises the
importance of a study in 1 or 2 sentences? Most only remember the "effect":
i.e. the mean effect: they remember nothing of the variation.
Even better, what kind of critical points should you routinely look for and
remember?
- Reflection e.g. keeping a learning diary. Several studies have shown that
students required to do this get sig. higher exam marks. Can we replicate
this? What kind of thinking is prompted, and why don't students do this
automatically?
- Expectation effects on learning in education.
A number of studies
have shown how a tiny intervention, sometimes only a few words, change a
learner's performance instantly and enough to change their grades. They use a
number of different theories for this. Can all these be explained as
expectation effects, and how might we apply this?
Specific topics 2011-12
- Producing a test of qualitative understanding for psychology.
Hestenes developed a test (the "FCI" = force concept inventory)
for physics at A-level / level1 HE that eventually showed that most HE
students could pass complicated looking physics questions with calculations,
but couldn't answer very simple questions that required qualitative
understanding. This so shocked some academics (when they used it on their own
classes) that it eventually led to the biggest, most powerful changes in
teaching yet reported in the literature. Could we do something similar for
psychology? It seems negligent not to try
...
This ref. gives a brief account of the method (many later papers discuss
results and developments):
Halloun,I.A. & Hestenes,D. (1985) American Journal of Physics
vol.53 no.11 pp.1043-1048
The question for the project is: can we invent an analogue for
psychology? What are the things that psychologists take for granted, but
students may not pick up at all quickly, even if they pass exams? Not
anecdote but the spread of human performance? ....
- Do a convincing test on whether and how the
AAW website
improves student writing.
- Investigate experimentally what reduces student anxiety: e.g. discussing
problems, discussing solutions, being made aware of support services, ....
Specific topics 2010-11
- There's a very promising project in progress offering students online
self-help for basic writing skills (since staff mostly refuse to help, yet
students know they want to get better). The feedback seems great, but a
direct controlled test would be good. So at least three kinds of project: a)
controlled experiment, using the materials, seeing whether students' writing
actually gets better if they study these materials (vs. just practising); b)
collecting data from students in departments that have this installed: what
are their attitudes, do they think they are getting better at writing, ....;
c) What do students in general feel about such self-help facilities for skills
such as writing/
- Summer projects: I may also have some summer studentships on education
topics.
- Ditto for a spin-off offering self-help on basic maths (actually
numeracy) especially for psychology students doing stats.
- I now have a contact in the university counselling service
.
who expressed some interest in co-supervising projects.
These are unlikely to involve contact with clients, but to study things such
as how useful the service seems to be to third parties such as academics;
or running experiments designed to cast light on the peculiar properties of
dialogue in counselling (e.g. that it is all about one person, and not about
reciprocity as in normal conversations).
Specific topics 2009-10
-
Dweck's "mindsets", and related studies.
- Peer assisted learning; study groups (what makes them really valuable,
or not).
- What aspects of group work matter for learning?
- I'm interested in a project (following up on one this year) on: when
will students who don't know each other nevertheless spontaneously collaborate
on a task, and when is their judgement right or wrong as to whether this will
improve their task performance? What role does shyness play (if any) in this?
- I have collaborated with
Jaye Richards, a teacher in a secondary school on
the south side, who has demonstrated major learning gains using a VLE in her
classes. There will be more research to do on what exactly the important
features of her new method are, perhaps following up a classroom
observational project. See
here
and
here.
- How does feedback to students actually work? Is it really as important
as the literature believes? is it always important, or just in some
circumstances? When it helps, what are the conditions e.g. having a 2-way
conversation not just a set of written comments?
- Creating (developing, piloting, testing) workshops for students that
increase their study skills, exam skills, justified self-confidence in their
knowledge and ability as students. I have done a few of these: many more
would be good.
Still wider general areas
In the past I have done research in HCI (human computer interaction) and
related topics. I have supervised a PhD on nutrition labels on food packages;
and 2 PhDs at the Art School: one on
education in the Art school (including a
study we did with a maxi student),
and one on
a theory of individual differences in approaches to design.
Emojis, and their use in communications like email.
Password security: combining psychology considerations with software
design approaches.
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