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BACKGROUND:
Title: Industrial/Organizational Psychology with
specialization in Human Factors/Ergonomics (MA, PhD). Contact: Robert
Henning, I/O Division, Psychology Department, University of Connecticut, 406
Babbidge Rd., Box U-1020, Storrs, CT 06269-1020; 860/486-5918; henning@uconnvm.uconn.edu, http://www.iopsych.uconn.edu/.
Est: 1985. Semester. Granted last 3 years: MA 10, PhD 4.
Part-time: no. Program: A major focus of this program is research
methodology and application of these skills to work-related issues of business,
government, and industry. Students can elect to specialize in either the Human
Factors/Ergonomics or the Personnel/Organizational track of the program. Course
work in the first year promotes an understanding of how ergonomics design and
personnel/organizational issues interact in complex sociotechnical systems. The
program is designed for students seeking the PhD via full-time study. A 9-month
field research or internship experience is required. HFES student chapter:
no. Catalog: (free) Graduate Admissions Office, Box U-6A, University
of Connecticut, 438 Whitney Road Extension, Storrs, CT 09269; http://www.uconn.edu/.
APPLICATION:
Deadlines: 1/1. Fee: USA: $40; International:
$45.
ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS:
GPA: 3.0. GRE: Required, but there is no
specific formula used for evaluation. Other: Applications are evaluated and
examined by the faculty once per year on a case-by-case basis. Research:
high. Work experience: low. Letters: high. Interview:
low.
ADMISSIONS:
Students applying last year: 80. Accepted: 6.
Entered program: 3. Openings/year: 3-5.
TUITION AND FEES:
Resident: $5692/year + $1144 fees. Nonresident:
$14784/year + $1144 fees.
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE:
% receiving: 100. Amount: $7959/$8377/$9311.
Available: TA (10 hrs/wk, tuition exempt but not fee exempt). Apply:
with application.
DEGREE REQUIREMENTS:
MA: 24 units, oral thesis defense, no languages or
practical experience, thesis research, 2 years. Nonthesis option: yes.
PhD: 20-24 units beyond MA, written and oral exam, no languages, research
study and dissertation research, 9 months field research/internship, 5
years.
CURRICULUM:
Required courses: I/O Proseminar I & II (6),
Analysis of Experiments (Statistics) (3), Quantitative Methods (Statistics) (3),
Research Methods (3). Electives (4 required): Human Judgment and Decision Making
(3), Occupational Health and Safety (3), Design and Analysis of Human-Machine
Systems (3), Work Systems and Performance (3), Simulation and Training (3), Work
Motivation (3), Leadership (3), Selection and Placement (3), Performance
Appraisal (3), Organizational Stress (3). Required courses outside
department: 0. Recommended courses outside department: 0. Class
size: 6.
RESEARCH/TEACHING OPPORTUNITIES:
Research facilities: The graduate program
in industrial/organizational psychology has four dedicated research labs
equipped for a wide range of experiments involving human participants. These
labs have capabilities for continuous computer-based measurement of behavior,
biobehavioral monitoring of small work teams, video presentations, and real-time
control of experimental variables. Labs are interconnected via a departmental
network and have access to the university mainframe computer. All students have
computer/Internet access. Teaching: Most teaching assistantships require
about 10 hours of work per week in support of instruction. TAs are required to
participate in training sessions. In most cases these assistants teach
undergraduate labs. Current research: All graduate students are required
to participate in research whenever in residence, and faculty-led research teams
meet regularly. Some recent topics in the human factors area include safety and
health of workers engaged in computer-mediated work, effects of
computer-mediated communication, worker control of performance feedback during
computer-based work, use of force feedback in simulated telerobotic control,
studies of worker judgment and cognition, effects of work schedules on
occupational health, transportation systems, and the psychophysiology of team
work. Recent research topics related to personnel and organizational psychology
include work-related and non-work-related sources of stress, age stereotypes at
work, the impact of electronic performance monitoring in the workplace, worker
participation in labor unions, cognitive processes in the appraisal of work
performance, early retirement decisions, and work-family conflicts.
STUDENT STATISTICS:
Active: 14 men, 13 women. First-year
students: 3. Mean scores: PhD (note: all students are accepted into
the PhD program): GRE 540 v, 670 q, 697 a, GPA 3.8.
FACULTY:
Janet Barnes-Farrell, PhD 1980, Pennsylvania State
U; psychology. Robert A. Henning, PhD 1986, U Wisconsin; industrial
engineering. R. James Holzworth, PhD 1974, Bowling Green U; psychology.
Vicki Magley, PhD 1999, U Illinois; psychology. Steven
Mellor, PhD 1985, Wayne State U; psychology. Donald I. Tepas
(emeritus), PhD 1963, SUNY at Buffalo; psychology.