Skip to main content
University of Texas at Austin and College of Liberal Arts
psychology departmentpsychology department
James W. Pennebaker, Chairman | SEA 4.212 | The University of Texas at Austin | Austin, TX 78712 | 512-471-1157

Home | About Us | Contact Us | Search UT | Seay Building Info | Alumni

News

Events & Lectures

Faculty

People (Directories)

Areas of Study

Course Descriptions

Undergraduate Program

Graduate Program

Student Resources

Labs & Affiliated
Organizations

Computer Resources

HomePage Server

Related Links

PSY 357 Development of the fantasy/reality distinction

UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH PROJECT

Advising | Admission to Psychology | Course Information | Career Planning | UT Resources

Faculty:

Jacqueline Woolley, Ph.D.

Contact:

Ansley Tullos tullos@mail.utexas.edu 
Chelsea Cornelius chelseacornelius@mail.utexas.edu
Maliki Ghoussainy malikig@mail.utexas.edu

Description:

Our research addresses how children decide what’s real and what’s not real. Most of our work is with preschool and young elementary school aged children. Ongoing studies include: 1) how children use evidence to decide if a novel entity exists, 2) how children understand and selectively use information from adults and peers (testimony research), and (3) how parents explain novel fantastical (or real) entities in storybooks.

Qualifications:

A strong interest in psychology, experience interacting with children, good social skills, reliability, and initiative. Must be able to work 9-10 hours per week in the lab (according to your schedule) for a two-semester commitment (e.g., summer-fall or fall-spring). Often students will also have the opportunity to work with children in local preschools and elementary schools. If you work at schools, you must have large blocks of free time (2-3 hours) in your schedule on at least 3 days during the week.

Duties:

Run one-on-one experiments with preschool- and elementary school-age children, interact with parents, schedule appointments, collect, code and enter data, help design studies, attend a lab meeting each week, and (at the end of the second semester) write a short paper on the research with which you were involved.

PSY 357 Undergraduate Research Projects (SPRING 2009)
PSY 357 Course Requirements

Updated 10 November 2008
College of Liberal Arts at the
University of Texas Austin
Copyright | Privacy Statement | Accessibility Information
Report broken links, problems and outdated information