PSYC-2301 Introduction to Psychology
Nicole Williams
Credit Fall 2025
Section(s)
PSYC-2301-003 (23276)
LEC RRC ONL DIL
LEC MW 12:00pm - 1:20pm RRC RRC1 1313.00
Course Requirements
Day-to-Day Class Information |
Class attendance and participation
Class attendance and active engagement in our hybrid course is required. Please arrive to class on time, stay for the entire duration of our class session, and come ready to learn and participate. Austin Community College has a “No Walk” policy. That means that unless the campus is closed due to emergency/weather/holiday, we will always have class at our scheduled time. You are allowed to miss TWO classes for any reason without penalty; after those two absences, your grade will be lowered for class absences. Please arrive to class on time and make a point to not schedule appointments during our class time as your participation grade will be lowered for tardiness and leaving class early. Participation/attendance grades cannot be made-up or supplemented by extra credit. If you have an emergency that will affect your course attendance, please contact Dr. Williams ASAP.
Class attendance/participation will be taken EVERY class period via participation slips that have two questions about the course lecture. You are expected to answer both of the questions to the best of your ability as these questions may likely be asked again on your exams. Please pick up your slips at the front of the class prior to the start of the lecture and turn them into the bucket before leaving class. However, if you are late to class, please wait until after the lecture to pick up your slip so as to not disrupt the flow of the lecture.
Lectures
All lectures will be given via PowerPoint. All narrated lectures will be recorded via Zoom or PowerPoint and posted with the non-narrated PowerPoint slides so that students can take notes while listening and viewing the lecture. Dr. Williams will post the lecture notes on our course page and students will be able to:
- Print PDF copies of slides to bring to class to take notes and/or
- Take notes on their computer/tablet during class on the slides.
It is highly suggested that you print the slides if you plan to take handwritten notes OR take notes in the note section of the PowerPoint during the lecture; you will not have time to copy down the content of the slides and listen to the additional content.
If you choose to not come to class, you are responsible for all material covered in class. While I am willing to help you in office hours with lecture material that you do not understand, I WILL NOT PROVIDE YOU WITH LECTURE NOTES IF YOU MISS CLASS!! In addition, you are also responsible for any announcements made in class, via email, or on Blackboard. Please contact one of your classmates if you need assistance with notes or announcements that you missed due to class absences or tardiness
Online course page
Our Online Course Page is on Blackboard. All of our course material can be found on this page. Please pay close attention to the Course Calendar as all of your due dates will be listed in that location. All assignments for a grade will be submitted through our Course Page and all student grades will be posted to our Course Page.
Assignments and grading |
Course assignments
All assignments that are turned in for a grade will be due at 11:59 pm on the due date assigned via the drop box on Blackboard.
Assignment |
Due Date |
Syllabus/Blackboard Quiz |
Friday, August 29, 2025 |
Learning Homework |
Sunday, September 14, 2025 |
Kohlberg Morality Homework or Motivation and Behavior Homework |
Wednesday, September 24, 2025 |
Privilege Homework |
Friday, October 10, 2025 |
Late work policy
The drop box on Blackboard will close at 11:59 pm sharp. After 11:59 pm, your assignment is now LATE. You will lose points for your assignments being late. If you submit your assignment after 11:59 pm for ANY reason after the drop box closes **AND YOU HAVE NOT MADE LEGITIMATE APPROVED ARRANGEMENTS WITH ME AHEAD OF TIME**, your assignment is considered late. If an assignment is due on Tuesday at 11:59 pm, and you turned it in late, here is what the highest possible grade you could receive on the following days:
Wednesday 12 am – Wednesday 11:59 pm |
85% (-15 points) |
Thursday 12 am – Thursday 11:59 pm |
70% (-15 points) |
Friday 12 am – Friday 11:59 pm |
60% (-10 points) |
Saturday 12 am or Later |
0% |
You will lose 15 points each for the first two days, 10 points for the third day, and if you fail to turn it in after the third day, you will get a zero on the assignment.
Turn in your late assignments to the designated late assignment drop box.
Exams
There will be three online exams in this course. Each of the exams are worth 100 points and will consist of multiple choice, true/false, matching, fill-in-the blank, and short answer questions. Exams are open book/open note, and you will have 80 – 90 minutes to complete each exam. No makeup exams will be offered; do not miss the 48 hour window on Blackboard to take the exam.
Exams will cover material from the lecture, the course textbook, the supplemental readings and videos, and any videos shown in class.
Assessment criteria
Description |
Total Points |
Percentage of your Grade |
Syllabus/Blackboard Quiz |
10 points |
5% |
Learning Homework |
20 points |
20% |
Kohlberg Morality Homework OR Motivation and Behavior Homework |
10 points |
10% |
Privilege Homework |
20 points |
20% |
Exams |
100 points each |
35% |
Participation |
10 points each |
10% |
Reading |
0 points |
Embedded in above percentages; Impossible to succeed at assignments and exams without reading. |
Grading scale
The following grading scale will apply to all graded work, as well as to each student’s final grade in the course.
Letter Grade |
Point Scale |
A |
90 - 100 |
B |
80 - 89 |
C |
70 – 79 |
D |
60 – 69 |
F |
59 or Below |
Note: I will round up (0.5+) or round down (0.49 or below) to the nearest grade. For example, an 89.6 will be rounded up to a 90 and an A, while a 69.3 will round down to a 69 and a D.
Readings
Required course textbook
Psychology 2e from OpenStax
Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-975076-45-0 |
Paperback ISBN: 978-1-975076-44-3 |
Digital ISBN: 978-1-951693-23-7 |
https://openstax.org/details/books/psychology-2e
Psychology 2e is an open educational resource (OER). OERs are free, openly licensed, and accessible resources that are available for use for educational, research, assessment, and learning purposes. These resources are often regularly updated and allow students to learn course material without a significant financial burden that is often associated with higher education.
You should read, understand, and remember much of the information, even if it is not all covered in the lecture. Most importantly, you are expected and required to have read the assigned readings before coming to class.
Required supplemental readings/videos
Supplemental readings and videos will be provided via Blackboard as assigned. Like our course text, you are expected and required to have read the assigned readings and viewed the assigned videos. These supplemental materials are assigned to help cement concepts that are often the most confusing subjects in this course. You will be graded on both the supplemental and textbook materials.
Course Calendar |
Note: Schedule changes may occur during the semester due to unforeseen events. Any changes will be announced in class and/or posted as a Blackboard Announcement.
All readings/videos should be read/watched before class to foster classroom discussion.
Date |
Topics |
Chapter(s) |
8.25 |
Syllabus |
|
8.27 |
Introduction to Psychology Psychological Research (N) |
1 – 2 |
8.29 |
Syllabus/Blackboard Quiz Due |
|
9.1 |
NO CLASS: Labor Day |
|
9.2 |
CENSUS DATE: Last Day to drop without a grade of “W”* |
|
9.3 |
Biopsychology (N) States of Consciousness |
3 – 4 |
9.8 |
Sensation and Perception (N) Learning |
5 – 6 |
9.10 |
Thinking and Intelligence (N) Memory Exam #1 Opens for 48 hours (5 pm) |
7 – 8 |
9.14 |
Learning Homework Due |
|
9.15 |
Lifespan Development |
9 |
9.17 |
Lifespan Development Emotion and Motivation (N) |
9 – 10 |
9.22 |
Gender and Sexuality Personality (N) |
11 |
9.24 |
Kohlberg Morality Homework or Motivation and Behavior Homework Due |
|
9.24 |
Social Psychology (N: Part 2) |
12 |
9.29 |
||
9.30 |
Exam #2 Opens for 48 hours (5 pm) |
|
10.1 |
Multicultural Psychology Industrial-Organizational Psychology (N) |
13 |
10.6 |
Multicultural Psychology Stress, Lifestyle, and Health (N) LAST DAY TO SPEAK TO DR. WILLIAMS ABOUT YOUR COURSE GRADE |
14 |
10.8 |
Psychological Disorders (N: Part 2 and 4) WITHDRAWAL DEADLINE (10.13) |
15 |
10.13 |
||
10.10 |
Privilege Homework Due |
|
10.15 |
Therapy and Treatment (In-Class and Narrated) |
16 |
10.16 |
Exam #3 Opens for 48 hours (5 pm) |
|
(N) = Narrated Lecture
*Any student who does not attend the course on 08.27.2025 and take the Syllabus/Blackboard Quiz will have an instructor-initiated withdrawal from the course on 9.2.2025. No exceptions.
This is a Hybrid Classroom (HYC). Face-to-Face attendance is required. Failure to regularly attend class may lead to instructor withdrawal.
Exam #1 |
Exam #2 |
Exam #3 |
Introduction to Psychology |
Thinking and Intelligence |
Multicultural Psychology |
Psychological Research |
Memory |
Industrial-Organizational Psychology |
Biopsychology |
Lifespan Development |
Stress, Lifestyle, and Health |
States of Consciousness |
Emotion and Motivation |
Psychological Disorders |
Sensation and Perception |
Gender and Sexuality |
Therapy and Treatment |
Learning |
Personality |
|
|
Social Psychology |
|
Course Subjects
Topics
Introduction to Psychology |
Emotion and Motivation |
Psychological Research |
Gender and Sexuality |
Biopsychology |
Personality |
States of Consciousness |
Social Psychology |
Sensation and Perception |
Multicultural Psychology |
Learning |
Industrial-Organizational Psychology |
Thinking and Intelligence |
Stress, Lifestyle, and Health |
Memory |
Psychological Disorders |
Lifespan Development |
Therapy and Treatment |
Student Learning Outcomes/Learning Objectives
Student Learning Outcomes |
Program outcomes
- Understand psychological concepts and be able to recognize them in real-world contexts.
- Acquire a basic understanding of major perspectives in the field.
- Gain an awareness of the breadth of the academic discipline of psychology.
- Understand the various research methods psychologists use and critically evaluate evidence.
Course outcomes
Upon completion of the course, the student should be able to achieve the following learning outcomes as mapped to the related program outcomes.
- Describe the major theories in psychology.
- Compare and contrast the historical and contemporary contexts of psychological theories and concepts.
- Question the historical and contemporary nature of psychological theories and concepts.
- Interpret the impact of emotional, social, geographic, personality, and physiologic influences in psychology.
- Discriminate how socially constructed milestones (e.g., occupation, relationships) individually impact psychological constructs.
- Evaluate cross-cultural issues in reference to psychological constructs.
- Value the use of research studies in the field of psychology.
- Examine evolving trends in the field of psychology and the manifestation of such trends at the local, regional, national and global levels.
Individual development and educational assessment (idea) course objectives
Objective 1: Gaining factual knowledge (terminology, classifications, methods, trends) |
|
Objective 2: Learning fundamental principles, generalizations, or theories |
ESSENTIAL |
Objective 3: Learning to apply course material (to improve thinking, problem solving, and decisions) |
IMPORTANT |
Objective 4: Developing specific skills, competencies, and points of view needed by professionals in the field most closely related to this course |
|
Objective 5: Acquiring skills in working with others as a member of a team |
|
Objective 6: Developing creative capacities (writing, inventing, designing, performing in art, music, drama, etc.) |
|
Objective 7: Gaining a broader understanding and appreciation of intellectual/cultural activity (music, science, literature, etc.) |
|
Objective 8: Developing skill in expressing myself orally or in writing |
|
Objective 9: Learning how to find and use resources for answering questions or solving problems |
|
Objective 10: Developing a clearer understanding of, and commitment to, personal values |
|
Objective 11: Learning to analyze and critically evaluate ideas, arguments, and points of view |
IMPORTANT |
Objective 12: Acquiring an interest in learning more by asking my own questions and seeking answers |
|
Keep in mind that although specific objectives are notated as “Important” and “Essential” for the course as a whole, each of these objectives will be important or essential for specific lectures.
Office Hours
M T W Th 10:45 AM - 1:15 PM Face-to-Face or Virtual;
NOTE Please use the calendar to request in-person or virtual office hours. If you are unable to meet during our scheduled office hours times, please EMAIL ME at Nicole.Williams@austincc.edu so that we can schedule a different time. Please schedule at least 24 hours in advance https://calendly.com/nicole-williams-e0a/drwilliamsfall2025 Regular Office Hours (by appointment) • Mon/Wed: 10:45 am - 11:45 am (1st 8-week semester) • Mon/Wed: 12:15 pm - 1:15 pm (2nd 8-week semester) • Tues/Thurs: 12 pm - 1 pmPublished: 08/04/2025 21:18:47