The quality of the student work was exceptional. I was extremely impressed by the quality of the student outreach projects and degree of engagement with the assignment. The students went above and beyond the assignment and engaged in community outreach efforts including concrete deliverables and attention from the campus community and local media attention.
The following are student work examples that demonstrate the effectiveness of the outreach project across both courses. All student work shared below was confirmed using written permission obtained through a standardized FTEP Student Consent Form for Sharing Student Work including explicit written permission to share their work with their name attached to it (SeeAppendix FԻAppendix G). Selected students’ work who provided this permission are included below, who were given an opportunity to add any additional comments about their experiences included in quotes below.
PSYC 3303: Abnormal Psychology
Student Work Example1
Destigmatizing language surrounding mental illness.One important aspect of the course content included the stigma surrounding mental illness and how to address and reduce stigma about mental health. A student (Meagan Taylor) conducted an outreach project focused on the use of slang labels relating to mental illness (i.e., “psycho” “nuts” or “crazy”) in perpetuating negative attitudes towards psychopathology. Her project involved making a high-quality video interviewing student volunteers about the language surrounding mental illness and distributing it via social media with the hashtag #stopthecrazytalk. This project was picked up by the Arts and Sciences Magazineand was also covered by a local media station (see photo with myself and the student interviewing for). It was also featured in the Department of Psychology and Neurosciencehomepage.
“Having the semester to create my own project and use my creative resources and imagination was incredibly empowering. When I started, I didn't realize how much it would help me engage with the material we were learning in class. Not only was I able to integrate my classroom learning with my project, but I expanded my own understanding by gathering many external information sources. Then I had the opportunity to teach my classmates, project partners, the campus community, and eventually a local newscast audience about mental health stigma. When you create a tangible product that you know will impact others, it helps you take learning more seriously. And it made the class truly unforgettable.”
Photos of Student Work (LEFT: Arts & Sciences Magazine, RIGHT: Channel 9 News Interview):
Student Work Example2
Raising awareness of mental health issues in college student athletes.The course covered the etiology, symptoms and treatment of depression. One student (Jalen Tompkins) conducted an outreach project focused on raising awareness of depression among college student athletes and advocate for changes in how college campuses approach and sensitively address this issue, noting that up to 68% of athletes surveyed exhibit clinical symptoms of depression, and that student athletes are particularly vulnerable to the development of depression compared to non-student athletes. Her project involved making a high-quality brochure and distributing it across the athletic department. Once the brochures were distributed she received attention from the sports psychologists and athletes at , resulting in the creation of a club within the student athletics department called the “Boulder Buffaloes” focused on “educating, destigmatizing, and being an ally to those battling any mental health issue.” The club will begin Fall 2019.
Student Quote:“This outreach project was a great experience and I loved being able to work with my community. Giving back and making an impactful difference is important to me. I never thought this project would trigger the creation of a club but I’m proud to help make a change.”
Student Work Example3
Internet usage and depression in adolescents.The course covered the developmental psychopathology of depression among children and adolescents. One student (Tanner Foster) conducted an outreach project focused on raising awareness of the prevalence of depression among adolescents and the potential contributions of Internet use. As part of his project he presented a PowerPoint presentation he delivered to a youth group on depression and internet use as a risk factor for junior high students at a school he currently volunteers at.
Photo of Student Work(student delivering talk to the middle school youth audience).
PSYC 3131: Human Emotion
Student Work Example1
Increasing awareness of emotion regulation among at-risk adolescents. One aspect of the course involved defining emotion regulation and discussing different empirically supported strategies for managing emotion intensity. A student (Jessica Summerton) conducted an outreach project focused on disseminating information about effective emotion regulation to an at-risk population of adolescent juveniles at the Boulder Juvenile Assessment Center with the goal of increasing their ability to understand effective emotion regulation through the use of an age-appropriate creative board game activity.
Student Work Example2
Exploring associations between music and emotion.The course touched upon the role of music in elicitation and experience of emotions. A student (Joseph Crispino) conducted an outreach project focused on discussing the links between music and emotion. His project involved making and delivering a radio podcast on this topic in the basement of the UMC on the University Campus –on 98.9 FM 1190AM.
Photo of Student Work (Student Recording Podcast):
Student Work Example3
Emotional numbness and mental health.One student (Alexa Williams) conducted an outreach project focused on disseminating information about emotional numbness among adults with a history of trauma. She creatively applied her background in poetry to write an original creative poetry piece depicting the qualitative experience of emotional numbness which she posted on a free poetry website platform called wattpad (see poem excerpt below, full link to website).
Student Quote:“Overall, I felt that my experience was very positive. The topic of emotional numbness can be very difficult to describe, but the research that went behind my poem project allowed me to better grasp this experience. I'm very glad that my poem was able to communicate this experience as well as it did. This project has inspired me to continue reading about emotion psychology and I hope to continue creating these type of projects in the near future.
Student Work (Original Poetry Excerpt):
The Pit
She told me a long time ago,
back when I was little,
to gather up my things and
keep them in a
tiny black bag.
And as she lead me through
the fog,
I couldn't help but
dread
the destination.
When she stopped,
I stumbled after her.
When she motioned toward the pit,
so deep that even light
was digested by the hungry darkness,
She said to me,
this is where our troubles go,
where shackles of sadness and defeat,
are forsaken.
She motioned towards
the tiny black bag,
but my grip grew tighter when she spat at
me,
“Just let it go”.
And as if my spine fell from under me,
it dropped from my trembling hands.
My stomach lurched with regret
when her eyes pierced right through me.
Through a pointed grin she whispered
“It feels good doesn’t it?”
The following are ways that I assessed effectiveness of the outreach project:
- Student learning questionnaire: Items about outreach project. To assess the effectiveness of the outreach project, I distributed a student learning questionnaire during the last week of class. This was distributed to students as an optional and anonymous questionnaire they could choose to complete while I left the room. The first part of the questionnaire assessed student learning and the extent to which the outreach project aligned with the course goals. I consulted with Professor Eric Vance who directs theLaboratory for Interdisciplinary Statistical Analysison best practices for devising these items.
- Student learning questionnaire: Items about overall course. The second part of the student learning questionnaire (SeeAppendix HԻAppendix I) assessed student learning and satisfaction with the overall course and my performance as an instructor, following best practices from the University of Colorado Faculty Course Questionnaire andTeaching Quality FrameworkInitiative questionnaire items.
- Student learning questionnaire: Comparative analysis across two courses. I distributed the same questionnaire to both courses. Coincidentally, the format of both courses had five parallel aspects in course format including: (1) Both taught the same Spring 2018 term, (2) held in the same classroom (MUEN 064), (3) similar enrollment (approximaten= 40), (4) offered at a similar schedule time (one weekly course meeting in a late afternoon 2.5 hour slot), and (5) offered at the same 3,000 course level. This provided a unique opportunity to assess the unique and shared features of the community outreach project within-instructor across different course content. Results suggested that students reported comparable and generally positive experiences across both classes (SeeTable 1ԻTable 2). A few differences emerged insofar as students in PSYC 3303 were more likely to recommend the outreach project as a valuable learning opportunity to someone else compared to PSYC 3131 (SeeTable 2).
Table 1. Summary of Teaching Effectiveness Ratings from University FCQs for Spring 2018
Course Number, Title |
Credit Hours |
Number of Students |
Instructor Rating |
Course Rating |
PSYC 3131, Human Emotion |
3.0 |
31/39 |
5.74/6.0 |
5.61/6.0 |
PSYC 3303, Abnormal Psychology |
3.0 |
30/37 |
5.73/6.0 |
5.67/6.0 |
Table 2. Summary of Student Learning Questionnaire
Part I: Outreach Project
Note: Items rated on 1 (not at all) to 6 (very much) scale.
1. How successful do you thinkthe outreach project was in achieving the following: |
PSYC 3131 (n= 24) |
PSYC 3303 (n= 27) |
Increasing engagement in the course material |
4.7 / 6.0 |
4.9 / 6.0 |
Increasing excitement about the course material |
4.6 / 6.0 |
4.6 / 6.0 |
Increasing learning of course material |
5.0 / 6.0 |
4.9 / 6.0 |
Bridging the gap between student and scientist/teacher |
4.8 / 6.0 |
4.9 / 6.0 |
2. How effective do you think the following parts of the outreach project were in enhancing your learning experience: |
PSYC 3131 (n= 24) |
PSYC 3303 (n= 27) |
Background proposal |
4.8 / 6.0 |
4.6 / 6.0 |
Creating project |
4.8 / 6.0 |
4.9 / 6.0 |
Disseminating project |
4.0 / 6.0 |
4.5 / 6.0 |
Flash talk |
3.8 / 6.0 |
4.2 / 6.0 |
3. To what extent did you engage in the following: |
PSYC 3131 (n= 24) |
PSYC 3303 (n= 27) |
Shared what you learning about your project with students in class |
3.8 / 6.0 |
3.7 / 6.0 |
Shared what you learned about your project with students outside of class |
4.5 / 6.0 |
4.3 / 6.0 |
4. To what extent did you feel the following was true: |
PSYC 3131 (n = 24) |
PSYC 3303 (n= 27) |
Successful at disseminating your outreach project |
4.4 / 6.0 |
4.6 / 6.0 |
Learned from other students present their flash talks |
5.1 / 6.0 |
5.1 / 6.0 |
Recommend this project as a valuable learning experience* |
4.5 / 6.0 |
5.2 / 6.0 |
Connected personally with scientists behind discoveries in the field |
3.5 / 6.0 |
3.9 / 6.0 |
5. How much effort did you put into each of the following parts of your outreach project: |
PSYC 3131 (n = 24) |
PSYC 3303 (n= 27) |
Background proposal |
5.0 / 6.0 |
4.9 / 6.0 |
Creating project |
5.0 / 6.0 |
5.4 / 6.0 |
Disseminating project |
4.2 / 6.0 |
4.7 / 6.0 |
Flash talk |
4.5 / 6.0 |
4.3 / 6.0 |
Part II: Course
1. General course questions1 |
PSYC 3131 (n = 24) |
PSYC 3303 (n= 27) |
How would you rate course overall? |
5.6 / 6.0 |
5.8 / 6.0 |
How would you rate Professor Gruber overall? |
5.6 / 6.0 |
6.0 / 6.0 |
1 Questions under Item #1 adapted from Boulder Faculty Course Questionnaire (FCQ).
2. How successful do you think the course achieved the following learning goals: |
PSYC 3131 (n = 24) |
PSYC 3303 (n= 27) |
Enhance conceptual understanding |
5.3 / 6.0 |
5.7 / 6.0 |
Exposure to state-of-the-art scientific methods |
5.1 / 6.0 |
5.1 / 6.0 |
Enhance appreciation and curiosity |
5.6 / 6.0 |
5.4 / 6.0 |
Deepen critical thinking skills through critique of literature |
5.2 / 6.0 |
5.2 / 6.0 |
Deepen critical thinking skills through lectures / readings |
5.0 / 6.0 |
5.2 / 6.0 |
3. In this course I was encouraged to:2 |
PSYC 3131 (n = 24) |
PSYC 3303 (n= 27) |
Reflect on what I was learning |
5.4 / 6.0 |
5.4 / 6.0 |
Evaluate arguments, evidence, assumptions* |
4.6 / 6.0 |
5.4 / 6.0 |
2 Questions under Items #3-#5 adapted from the Teaching Quality Framework (TQF) conducted by Professor Noah Finkelstein at Boulder.
4. In this course, the instructor |
PSYC 3131 (n = 24) |
PSYC 3303 (n= 27) |
Maintained environment respectful diverse students / points of view |
5.9 / 6.0 |
5.9 / 6.0 |
Seemed personally invested in student success |
5.7 / 6.0 |
5.9 / 6.0 |
Provided content and materials that were helpful |
5.7 / 6.0 |
5.9 / 6.0 |
5. In this course, I was |
PSYC 3131 (n = 24) |
PSYC 3303 (n= 27) |
Challenged to develop knowledge, comprehension, understanding |
5.3 / 6.0 |
5.4 / 6.0 |
Provided opportunities to ask questions and initiate discussion* |
5.3 / 6.0 |
5.7 / 6.0 |
Provided feedback on my work |
5.1 / 6.0 |
5.4 / 6.0 |
Encouraged to connect class to other classes or life experiences |
5.1 / 6.0 |
5.4 / 6.0 |
* = p < .05 PSYC 3303 Abnormal Psychology versus PSYC 3131 Human Emotion
6. Other |
PSYC 3131 (n = 24) |
PSYC 3303 (n= 27) |
What is your anticipated course grade? |
3.8 / 4.0 |
3.6 / 4.0 |
What is your anticipated outreach project grade? |
3.7 / 4.0 |
3.7 / 4.0 |