Scott Plous

Scott Plous
Citizenship American
Fields Social psychology
Institutions Wesleyan University
Alma mater Stanford University[1]
Doctoral advisor Philip Zimbardo
Known for Social Psychology Network
Influences Philip Zimbardo
Website
www.socialpsychology.org/plous.htm

Scott Plous is an academic social psychologist, currently working as a Professor of Psychology at the Department of Psychology, Wesleyan University.[2]

His areas of research include the psychology of prejudice and discrimination, judgment and decision making, international security and counter-terrorism, interactive web-based research, and the human use of animals and the environment. He is also the founder of the Social Psychology Network.[3][4]

Plous coined the term “action teaching” in 2000.[5] In this article he presented action teaching as the pedagogical counterpart to action research, a term coined by Kurt Lewin in the aftermath of World War II (Marrow, 1969). This experience of action teaching, he says, “leads not only to a better understanding of psychology but to a more just, compassionate and peaceful world.” [6]

In 2001, he published a study that evaluated the reliability of Institutional Animal Care and Use Committees (IACUCs), and found that animal testing standards in the United States are widely inconsistent across different research institutions.[7]

Plous has published two books, and numerous journal articles, on social issues, animal rights, and psychology. He is best known as a founder of Social Psychology Network, a suite of nonprofit web sites supported by the National Science Foundation, created in 1996. Currently Plous also teaches social psychology online through Coursera's MOOC[8]

Publications

Books

Journal articles

Honors

Awards

Notes

  1. http://www.socialpsychology.org/plous.htm
  2. http://www.wesleyan.edu/templates/dept/psyc/skeleton_faculty.htt?function=f1&department=psyc&faculty=splous
  3. Socialpsychology.org
  4. Newsletter.blog.wesleyan.edu
  5. Plous, S. (2000). Responding to overt displays of prejudice: A role-playing exercise. Teaching of Psychology, 27, 198-200. (For a free copy, visit www.understandingprejudice.org/pdf/roleplay.pdf)
  6. Azar, B. (2008, December). Bringing lessons to life. Monitor on Psychology, 39, 56-58. (For a free copy, visit www.socialpsychology.org/pdf/action-teaching.pdf)
  7. Study Finds Inconsistency in Animal Research Reviews, Wesleyan University; July 27, 2001
  8. https://www.coursera.org/course/socialpsychology/
  9. Meet a professor of the year, gradPSYCH, January 2007.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.