The following section contains a complete list of courses for its curriculum. For current course listings please see the Course Description section of our website.
PSYC-1010/3 Introduction to Psychology I – Foundations: Survey of the psychological study of behaviour, and of the
essential psychological and physiological foundations of
human growth, thinking, and behaviour. Topics include
research processes, neuropsychology, genetic and
environmental influences, sensation and perception,
consciousness, learning, and development.
PSYC-1020/3 Introduction to Psychology II - Individuals
and Interactions: Survey of the psychological processes that
shape individual human behaviour and thinking, and that
influence interaction. Topics include memory, thinking and
intelligence, motivation and emotion, personality, stress,
disorders and their treatment, and social processes.
Prerequisite: PSYC-1010/3
PSYC/BUSI-2020/3 Organizational Behaviour: Examination
of the impact of human behaviour on the formal and informal
organization. Topics include leadership, work groups,
organizational conflict, and communications. Prerequisite: BUSI
1000/3 or PSYC-1020/3 or permission of instructor.
PSYC-2030/3 Research Design in Psychology: An
introduction to basic research designs in the social sciences.
Topics include considerations in data collection, descriptive
and survey methods, measurement techniques, experimental
methods, the interpretation and reporting of results, and
research ethics. This course is required for Psychology majors.
Includes a laboratory requirement. A laboratory fee will be
assessed. Prerequisite: PSYC-1020/3 or permission of instructor.
PSYC-2040/3 Research Analysis in Psychology: An
introduction to basic techniques in data analysis for the social
sciences, and their relation to specific research designs. Topics
include descriptive statistics, predictive techniques,
hypothesis testing and estimation, and inferential statistics.
This course is required for Psychology majors. Includes a
laboratory requirement. A laboratory fee will be assessed.
PSYC-2100/3 Social Cognition and Influence: An
examination of how we think about ourselves and about the
people around us. Topics include social perception, our social
selves, beliefs and judgments, attitudes, conformity, and
persuasion. Prerequisite: PSYC-1020/3 or permission of the
instructor.
PSYC-2110/3 Social Relationships and Behaviour: A study
of how relationships are formed, maintained, and disrupted.
Topics may include group dynamics, close relationships,
prejudice, aggression, attraction, and conflict. Prerequisite:
PSYC-1020/3 or permission of instructor.
PSYC-2200/3 Developmental Psychology—Childhood: A
study of psychological development from prenatal life until
puberty. Topics include personality and social development,
perceptual and cognitive development, language,
intelligence, and moral development. Prerequisite: PSYC-
1010/3 or permission of instructor.
PSYC-2210/3 Developmental Psychology—Adolescence: A
study of psychological development from puberty until
adulthood. Topics may include history of theory and research
on adolescence, family structures, parent and peer pressure,
sex role development, identification, cognitive development,
and youth culture. Prerequisite: PSYC-1010/3 or permission of
instructor.
PSYC-2220/3 Developmental Psychology—Adulthood: A
study of psychological development and adjustment during
adulthood and aging. Topics include normal aging processes,
family relationships, work and retirement, health concerns, life
satisfaction, and end of life issues. Prerequisite: PSYC-1010/3 or
permission of instructor.
PSYC-2300/3 Cognitive Processes: A study of the unique
cognitive processes that determine our understanding of the
external world (and its people). We will examine the processes
of perception and attention, of learning and memory, of
language production and comprehension, and of reasoning
and decision making. Attention is given to both effective
functioning and to the biases and distortions that influence
our thinking. Prerequisite: PSYC-1020/3 or permission of
instructor.
PSYC-2400/3 Counselling Theories: An overview of current
counselling theories, such as Psychoanalytic, Existential,
Person-Centered, Gestalt, Reality, Behaviour, and Cognitive
therapies. Attention will be given to their respective
therapeutic processes and to a critical evaluation of each
theory. Prerequisite: PSYC-1020/3 or permission of instructor.
PSYC-2410/3 Counselling Techniques: Explores the
formation of helping relationships, using the Human Relations
Model of Helping, with a focus on self-understanding as a
basis for effective communication and understanding of
human interactions. Topics will also include helping skills,
helper characteristics, communication skills, barriers to communication, relationship establishment, ethics and values
clarification. Prerequisite: PSYC- 2400/3.
PSYC/SOCI-2700/3 Interpersonal Communication: An
examination of the multilevel communication processes that
underlie and support social interaction and relationship
formation and change. Special attention will be given to the
differences and connections between verbal and nonverbal
communication and to the rules and rituals of social
interaction in everyday life. Prerequisite: PSYC-1020/3 or SOCI-
1020/3 or PCTS-1020/3.
PSYC-2800/3 History of Psychology: This course explores
the intellectual and social contexts within which the diverse
theories and models of the discipline have arisen. Major
themes and trends will be analyzed, together with influential
theorists and landmark studies. Most importantly, the
assumptions underlying psychological explanations for
human behaviour will be examined. Prerequisite: PSYC-1020/3
or permission of instructor.
PSYC-2950/3 Topics in Psychology: The content of this
course will vary from year to year, depending on the needs of
students and the interests and availability of instructors.
Prerequisite: Will vary based on topics chosen for this course.
PSYC/BUSI--3000/3 Organizational Leadership: Examination of the theory and practice of leadership and
decision-making in organizations. Topics include trait,
behavioural and situational models of organizational
leadership, leadership as power and influence, and processes
involved in the decision making of individuals and groups,
large and small, formal and informal. Attention will also be
given to development of skills in leadership. Prerequisite: 45
credit hours of university-level courses.
PSYC-3030/3 Qualitative Inquiry in the Social Sciences: An
introduction to conducting qualitative research in the
social sciences. Topics include: the assumptions that
inform qualitative research designs; procedures for
gathering meaningful data through interviews,
observation, and textual archives; the analysis of such
data; and ethical issues pertaining to the research
endeavour. Prerequisite: 45 credit hours of university-level
courses.
PSYC-3400/3 Abnormal Psychology: An examination of
current theory and research regarding abnormal human
behaviour, and an attempt to understand psychological
disorders within the context of human biology, development,
and society. Topics may include stress and anxiety, affective
disorders, psychophysiological and personality disorders,
mental health, policy and social issues. Both scientific
explanation and phenomenology will be addressed.
Prerequisite: 30 credit hours of university-level studies, including
PSYC-1020/3 or permission of the instructor.
PSYC/INTG-3800/3 Psychology and Christianity: Both
Christian belief and psychological theory have much to say
about human nature, about what/ how we can know, and
about how we should think and behave. There are many
points of agreement and of conflict. This course represents a
re-consideration of various psychological theories and well-known
research findings from Christian perspectives.
Prerequisite: 12 credit hours in Psychology.
PSYC-3950/3 Topics in Psychology: The content of this
course will vary from year to year, depending on the needs of
students and the interests and availability of instructors.
Prerequisite: A minimum of 30 credit hours of university-level
studies. Specific course prerequisites will vary based on the topics
chosen for this course.
PSYC-4940/3 Independent Study in Psychology: A study in
a specific area of Psychology under the direction of a faculty
member. Prerequisites: A minimum of 60 credit hours of
university-level studies, including 15 credit hours in psychology
plus permission of instructor.
PSYC-4950/3 Topics in Psychology: The content of this
course will vary from year to year, depending on the needs of
students and the interests and availability of instructors.
Prerequisite: A minimum of 60 credit hours of university-level
studies. Specific course prerequisites will vary based on the topics
chosen for this course.
