This was a fascinating book. It is simply an intro to psychology workbook. The format for most books of this nature is not as streamlined. Each chapter is only a few pages and gives you the most pertinent information. This makes it easy for the reader to discuss afterwards. Perhaps this could be a problem if someone was trying to learn specific vocabulary, but I would assume the classroom setting would foster that. In my instance I read the book on my own and those details and tips for memory would have only slowed my ability to absorb the info. I was already familiar with a lot of the material, but it still added new concepts. It was arranged by topics and that made it fun to pick and choose. Most of the cases were presented in a style that didn't overtly suggest things, but allowed the reader to infer it themselves afterwards. When there was a study on animals, it was easy to figure out the implications for humanity. But it didn't force it on the reader. I don't think people need to go out and find this book, but if you stumble on it, feel free to flip around it. It has some very enlightening passages (one that comes to mind is the study that women's genitals also engorge with blood during coitus, which should be common knowledge and yet is not).