READ FOR PSYC 281
I was pleasantly surprised by this course. I had a bad feeling about it because I seem to do terribly in all the biology based psych courses, but the layout of this textbook is perfect to help students study. There are mini quizzes throughout the chapters and longer ones at the back to help you review. Neither operant nor classical conditioning are new to me, from the numerous classes I've taken, but learning about them both in such detail, to know how they actually work and how animals (and people) actually become conditioned, was surprisingly interesting. I've already tried using some of these techniques with my cat.
The book also gives useful study habits, explains why bad habits are so hard to kick, talks about motivation, rewards, why we do things sometimes and don't know why... There's a lot of terms/jargon and memorization involved, but the book is laid out to build on previous chapters to gradually explain more and more, especially regarding operant conditioning. I guess there's a view that classical conditioning is all dogs and operant all rats and pigeons, and the research often is, but it has really interesting practical applications for humans.