Articles must be selected from psychological journals and must be relevant to topics covered in General Psychology such as child development, nervous system and behavior, learning, memory, psychopathology, etc. (NOTE: Psychology Today and other summaries that can be located on the Internet are not acceptable sources). Psychology journals include those published by the two major organizations for professional psychologists: the American Psychological Association (APA) and the Association for Psychological Science (APS). To see the journals published by the APA, go to: http://www.apa.org/pubs/journals/index.aspx To see the journals published by the APS, go to: http://www.psychologicalscience.org/index.php/publications You should be able to retrieve articles from most, if not all, of these journals through the Rutgers Library Network: http://www.libraries.rutgers.edu/ Paper Format 1. Construct a face page that includes your name, RUID, course section, date and the words Article Summary. 2. At the top of the next page type the source of the article. Begin with author(s) name(s) followed by year, title of the article, journal name, volume and pages. Here is an example of the expected format: Rich, C.L., Ricketts, J.E., Fowler, R.C., & Young, D. (1988). Some differences between men and women who commit suicide. American Journal of Psychiatry, 145, pp. 718-722. 3. Structure your summary using the following headings: A. Introduction. State the topic of the investigation and the major question(s) being addressed including primary hypotheses or predictions. B. Method. The method section should be subdivided as follows: Participants. Who or what served as subjects? If human subjects were involved, provide the relevant information, e.g., 103 undergraduate students, 63 females and 40 males. Instruments. What materials were used? Here you report the instruments or equipment used in the study (questionnaires, observations, tests, injections, mazes). Procedures. What did the researchers do? What procedures did they follow? For example, “Participants were asked to memorize a list of words under 3 different conditions” (describe the conditions) “and were then tested for their ability to recall the words.” C. Results. Briefly summarize the results. In many instances, results are reported in the context of the statistical methods used in the investigation. You are not expected to be able to understand this statistical information. Instead, go for words and report the major findings D. Discussion and Evaluation. Describe what you learned from the study. Although a sophisticated methodological critique of the study is probably beyond your reach at this point in your education, feel free to comment on any flaws you find in the research, alternative perspectives not considered by the author(s), and other mattes that captured your attention. In most instances, it will be sufficient to simply declare what you “brought away” with you as a result of studying the article. Note that one of the primary challenges of this alternative to research participation is to condense a great deal of information into a small (2-page) package. Clear, crisp, descriptive writing is essential. E. Attachment. Attach a photocopy of the first page of the article you review at the end of your 2-page paper.