1 / 19

The 5 W’s of Industrial/Organizational (I/O) Psychology

The 5 W’s of Industrial/Organizational (I/O) Psychology. Dr. Russ Johnson University of South Florida. What is I/O psychology?. Textbook definition: “Application of psychological principles and theories to the workplace” What I tell my folks:

mada
Télécharger la présentation

The 5 W’s of Industrial/Organizational (I/O) Psychology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The 5 W’s of Industrial/Organizational (I/O) Psychology Dr. Russ JohnsonUniversity of South Florida

  2. What is I/O psychology? • Textbook definition: • “Application of psychological principles and theories to the workplace” • What I tell my folks: • “Study of how people get along at work and are able to perform effectively”

  3. What is I/O psychology? • Subareas within I/O • Industrial or personnel psychology • HR stuff: recruitment, job analysis, selection, training, performance appraisal, compensation, employment law (Title VII of CRA) • KSAs job performance • Organizational psychology • Micro: motivation, leadership, teams, worker attitudes, safety & well-being, work-family • Macro: org theory, culture, org development & change

  4. What is I/O psychology? • Subareas within I/O • Human factors & ergonomics • Modifying equipment & env to fit workers

  5. www.baddesigns.com

  6. What is I/O psychology? • Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology (SIOP) • www.siop.org • Division 14 of the American Psychological Association (APA) • Good overviews… • Textbooks by the two Pauls

  7. Who are I/O psychologists? • Two general groups • Academics • Professors in research- and teaching- oriented universities and colleges • Example departments: psychology, management, industrial relations, quantitative sciences, occupational health & safety • Major activities • Teaching courses, conducting research, writing and presenting research papers, attending conferences, mentoring students, performing university and professional service

  8. Who are I/O psychologists? • Two general groups • Practitioners • HR and organizational specialists in consulting, private, and public organizations • Major activities • Job analysis, diagnosis, surveying employees, designing and administering selection & performance appraisal systems, training, developing psychological tests, implementing and evaluating OD & change, data analysis • “Other” category • Research institutes, think tanks (e.g., RAND)

  9. Who are I/O psychologists?

  10. Who are I/O psychologists? • Scientists AND practitioners • Understanding and evaluating research necessary for good practice… • …and awareness of practical problems necessary for good research • I/Oers are thieves! • We “borrow” from social, cognitive, developmental, clinical, and other areas of psychology

  11. Where do you go to become an I/O psychologist? • Grad school!!! • Top PhD programs • Minnesota, Michigan State, Illinois (UIUC), Akron, Bowling Green, Penn State, George Mason, South Florida, Maryland • Good PhD programs (just a sampling!) • Central Florida, Florida Tech, Georgia Tech, Colorado State, Portland State, San Diego State • Want to be a Canuck? Waterloo, Western Ontario, Calgary, Guelph, St. Mary’s

  12. Where do you go to become an I/O psychologist? • Typical grad school timeline • Lots of course work in years 1 and 2 • MA thesis completed in year 2 or 3 • Varies in formality by program • Internship? • Comprehensive exams in year 3 • Dissertation in years 4 and 5 • Proposal and defense meetings

  13. Where do you go to become an I/O psychologist? • Other considerations… • PhD or MA program? • Psychology or business? • Application req’ts may vary (GRE vs. GMAT) • Coursework varies (social vs. strategy) • More stats and RM courses in psych • PhD in business is 100% research-focused • Thesis not typical in business • Funding better in business • Short-term vs. long-term considerations

  14. When should you begin thinking about grad school in I/O psychology? • The sooner the better! • Stuff to think about early on • Relevant coursework • I/O (duh!), stats, research methods, tests & measures, social, personality, motivation, cognitive, OB/HR • Research experience • Honor’s thesis, RA • Experience is more important than topic • Interact with faculty, grad students • Be active (not passive) • Attend brownbags • Involvement in professional societies (Psi Chi, SIOP)

  15. When should you begin thinking about grad school in I/O psychology? • Speaking of research assistance… • Erin Eatough (eeatough@mail.usf.edu) is hiring 3 RAs for Spring semester • OHP study requiring help with… • Participant recruitment • Data collection • Data entry & management • Motivated RAs will have opportunities to contribute to presentation and publication of research

  16. When should you begin thinking about grad school in I/O psychology? • Senior year • GRE • Positive correlation between study time and score • Allow time for make-up, if necessary • Subject GRE? • Application materials (due dates begin in Dec) • Recommendation letters • People who know you well and can comment on your scholarly potential • Personal statement • Get examples & seek feedback • Tailor them to programs

  17. Why should you consider getting a degree in I/O psychology? • Applied field • There will always be practical problems to solve! • Company restructuring & downsizing • Workplace diversity • Variety of job possibilities • Academic positions in multiple departments • Internal and external consulting • Private and public organizations • Any combination of the above

  18. Why should you consider getting a degree in I/O psychology? • Variety of research topics • Attitudes, emotions, behavior (social) • Learning, memory, heuristics (cog) • Employee aging, retirement (develop) • Employee counseling, coaching (clinical) • Data analysis, test development (quant) • Field is growing • More and more I/O and mgmt dept’s • Out with the old, in with the new…

  19. Thank you! • Any more questions?

More Related