Union County College Videos
Casablanca
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta) on September 01, 2009
Duration: 6160
also in: Com109 Educational Intro to film Telecourse Union county college
Duration: 6160
also in: Com109 Educational Intro to film Telecourse Union county college
3. The Star (60:00)
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta) on September 01, 2009
Duration: 979
also in: Com109 Educational Intro to film Telecourse Union county college
Duration: 979
also in: Com109 Educational Intro to film Telecourse Union county college
Chasing My Father's Shadow, by Joseph Eulo
from KQEDQUEST on May 08, 2009
Duration: 1217
Duration: 1217
The documentary, Chasing My Father s Shadow, began in Professor Karen Schmidt s Child Psychology course as a research assignment exploring the cause and effect of paternal absence on the development of a child s identity and psychological well-being from a psychodynamic perspective. The lessons I learned in Child Psychology this semester opened my eyes to the possibility of becoming a better father by ending the cycle of paternal absence that has been my inheritance. In the context of the classroom, I began a new passage in my life. By undertaking this exploration, I traveled a road leading me through self-discovery to forgiveness. My role as father to my daughter Anna has never been more important to me than it is now. As I see her grow, I am all the more committed to being a father; one that is not only present but fully engaged in the development of her hopes and dreams. She is the inspiration for this project and the reason for me to finally heal. As my research progressed I began to realize that the search for my own identity was leading me back again and again to my role as father and afforded me the opportunity to begin the difficult process of healing catharsis. In my father s absence, I also became an absent father. I learned the importance of a father s influence in the social, emotional and intellectual development of children. Even though I will never get back the missed moments of my daughter s childhood, I understand that it is not too late for me to be a father to her now. The parental skills I developed as a result of taking Professor Schmidt s class will last a lifetime and have assisted me in re-establishing a meaningful relationship with my daughter.
also in: By joseph eulo Child psychology Documentary Honors Paternal absence Shadow Studies Ucc Union county college
17 - PSY101 - Psychosexual Stages of Development
from montellik on August 17, 2008
Duration: 3660
Duration: 3660
Oral, Anal, Phallic, Latency, Genital A newborn baby, according to Freud, is bubbling with energy (libido; psychic energy). However, this energy is without focus or direction, which would not allow for survival. How, then, does the child develop the ability to control and direct his/her energy? Psychic energy is an important concept in Freudian psychology. The structure of the mind and development all revolve around how the individual attempts to deal with psychic energy. Raw libinal impulses provide the basic fuel that the mind runs on. But the vehicle (mind) needs to well-formed and well-tuned in order to get maximum energy. In order to understand development (and neuroses), then, we should follow the energy and see where it goes. As with physical energy, psychic energy cannot be created or destroyed in a big picture sense, however it may be dealt with in non-obvious ways. So, where does the infant s, then the child s, the adolescent s, and adult s energy get focused? Freud believed that as development occurs the baby begins to focus on first one object then another. As the infant s focus shifts the style and type of gratification being sought changes. The focal objects for the developing child s energy serves to define five main stages of psychological development: 1. oral (0-18 months) 2. anal (18 months - 3 1/2 years) 3. phallic (3 1/2 years - 6 years) 4. latency (6 years - puberty) 5. genital (puberty - adulthood) Each psychosexual stage has three main parts: 1. A physical focus: Where the child s energy is concentrated and their gratification obtained. 2. A psychological theme: This is related to both the physical focus and the demands being made on the child by the outside world as he/she develops. For each stage, there can be two extremes in psychological reaction - either doing too much or not enough of what is ideal. 3. An adult character type: In the first three stages this adult character type is one that is related to being fixated or stuck at that stage. If a person doesn t resolve the psychological issues that arise at that stage they will always have problems relating to those issues.
also in: Anal Development Educational General psychology Genital Introduction to psychology Joe eulo Joseph eulo Latency Oral Phallic Psy101 Psychosexual Psychosexual stages Stages Tharney Union county college
06 - PSY101- Audio from Past, Present, Promise
from NVNS on August 16, 2008
Duration: 98
Duration: 98
"Past, Present, and Promise" is the first program in the DISCOVERING PSYCHOLOGY series. It provides an introduction to and overview of psychology, from its origins in the nineteenth century to current study of the brain s biochemistry. You ll explore the development of psychology in general and some of the paths scientists take to determine relationships among the mind, the brain, and behavior. Psychology is defined as the scientific study of the behavior of individuals and their mental processes. Like many sciences, psychology has evolved with technology, giving doctors and researchers new tools to measure human behavior and analyze its causes. In this program, Dr. Mahzarin Banaji from Yale University uses the Implicit Association Test (IAT) to measure how quickly positive or negative values are associated with white or black faces. Her subjects are shown a series of words and pictures and instructed to respond immediately by pushing a button to indicate their most automatic, reflex-like reactions. For example, they may be told to press a button in their right hand if the automatic association is good and to press a button in their left hand if the association is bad. The speed with which the subjects respond is an important element of the experiment because these quick, unconscious connections can reveal biases that differ from conscious beliefs. The IAT results are matched against functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) data to track activity in the amygdala, the region of the brain that responds to fearful or negative images. By correlating data on the buttons subjects pushed with fMRI information about activity in the amygdala, Dr. Banaji and her colleagues have found some interesting results. The majority of the white American respondents showed an unconscious association of white with good and black with bad, while the African American respondents showed mixed results. Half more quickly associated black with good, and the other half associated white with good. Tracking brain activity in controlled experiments reveals not only the region of the brain at work, but also the power of images and messages in our culture on the subconscious human psyche, bringing psychologists one step closer to understanding human behavior. For more info on this topic visit http://psy101.MyUCCedu.com
also in: Educational General psychology Introduction to psychology Joe eulo Joseph eulo Past Present Promise Psy101 Tharney Union county college
Visons of Jazz 5.0
from Film by Joe on August 03, 2008
Duration: 1333
Duration: 1333
This is the final revision of "Visions of Jazz". An English Honors Group Presentation based on the timeline of the book "Jazz" by Toni Morrison. In this Video I was finally able to add the Narration to the timeline. Special Kudos to Ed Flynn, Sheila Casey, and Raquel Carter for a great job on the Narration. Shelia Casey wrote the Script and I took care of combining the images, titles, transitions, and audio together to create the video. Dr. John Russell provide Shiela and I with wisdom and guidence throughout the project.I learned a great deal about myself as a result of this project, I related with the characters in Morrisons book in a way that I cant even understand or express. All I know is that I have changed emotionally and spirtually, and learned how to comfort the lost and confused little boy inside me.Thank you Toni Morrison for a life changing book, and Thank you to my classmates who worked on the project and Dr.John Russell who was patient and encouraging throuout this videos culimination.
also in: By joe eulo By joseph eulo Cranford nj Dr. john russell Ed flynn Jazz Joe eulo John russell Joseph eulo Raquel carter Sheila casey Toni morrison Ucc Union county college Videoblogging Visons of jazz
V1 - Past, Present, Promise
from Film by Joe on July 05, 2008
Duration: 1637
Duration: 1637
Past, Present, and Promise is the first program in the DISCOVERING PSYCHOLOGY series. It provides an introduction to and overview of psychology, from its origins in the nineteenth century to current study of the brain s biochemistry. You ll explore the development of psychology in general and some of the paths scientists take to determine relationships among the mind, the brain, and behavior.Psychology is defined as the scientific study of the behavior of individuals and their mental processes. Like many sciences, psychology has evolved with technology, giving doctors and researchers new tools to measure human behavior and analyze its causes.In this program, Dr. Mahzarin Banaji from Yale University uses the Implicit Association Test (IAT) to measure how quickly positive or negative values are associated with white or black faces. Her subjects are shown a series of words and pictures and instructed to respond immediately by pushing a button to indicate their most automatic, reflex-like reactions. For example, they may be told to press a button in their right hand if the automatic association is good and to press a button in their left hand if the association is bad. The speed with which the subjects respond is an important element of the experiment because these quick, unconscious connections can reveal biases that differ from conscious beliefs.The IAT results are matched against functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) data to track activity in the amygdala, the region of the brain that responds to fearful or negative images. By correlating data on the buttons subjects pushed with fMRI information about activity in the amygdala, Dr. Banaji and her colleagues have found some interesting results. The majority of the white American respondents showed an unconscious association of white with good and black with bad, while the African American respondents showed mixed results. Half more quickly associated black with good, and the other half associated white with good. Tracking brain activity in controlled experiments reveals not only the region of the brain at work, but also the power of images and messages in our culture on the subconscious human psyche, bringing psychologists one step closer to understanding human behavior.
also in: Class note Educational Eulo General psychology Joseph Psy101 Psych class notes Tharney Ucc Union county college
V2 - Understanding Research
from Film by Joe on July 05, 2008
Duration: 1636
Duration: 1636
Understanding Research is the second program in the DISCOVERING PSYCHOLOGY series. This program examines how we know what we know. You ll explore the scientific method, the distinction between fact and theory, and the different ways in which data are collected and applied, both in labs and in real-world settings.Research often begins with a question. Traditionally, answers have been found in lab experiments, surveys, test groups, and interviews.This program provides an example of research in a field setting. Psychologist Dr. Christina Maslach of the University of California at Berkeley studies job burnout, what causes it, and what can be done to prevent it. Instead of using traditional lab settings, Dr. Maslach conducts her research where the burnout is happening, in the workplace, using a real-world setting as a lab.By taking this fly-on-the-wall approach, Dr. Maslach studies stress as it occurs, relying on subjects live experiences rather than just their memories or perceptions of past experiences. In this case, she has developed a scale to measure job burnout and a scale to measure the health of the workplace environment. Scientific methods to ensure accuracy are part of her approach. She collects data from carefully controlled measurements and observations, and the research process is methodical. The experiment can then be reproduced and the data tested by other researchers. By sharing data through publishing results, psychologists provide new understandings and new tools, as well as fodder for new questions and debates.Through this consistent, long-term work, Dr. Maslach s research has shed light not only on individual employees behavior, but also on the behavior of an entire organization. The application of this research helps individuals develop mechanisms for coping with stress, and assists organizations in evaluating the health and effectiveness of the workplace.
also in: Class note Educational Eulo General psychology Joseph Psy101 Psych class notes Tharney Ucc Union county college
V3 - The Behaving Brain
from Film by Joe on July 05, 2008
Duration: 1751
Duration: 1751
The Behaving Brain is the third program in the DISCOVERING PSYCHOLOGY series. This program looks at the structure and composition of the human brain: how neurons function, how information is collected and transmitted, and how chemical reactions relate to thought and behavior.The human brain is an extraordinarily complex organ made up of different regions and parts, each with its own function. Chemical molecules and electrical impulses constantly flow between regions of the brain, sending signals and messages to other parts of the brain and body. Much like an orchestra, brain functioning depends on many individual parts working together.One example highlighted in this program is the brain s role in our ability to remember. Psychologist Dr. Mieke Verfaellie studies the causes and effects of amnesia at the Memory Disorders Research Center in Boston. Her research draws on evidence of damage to the hippocampal region of the brain, the area responsible for laying down new memories.Contrary to popular opinion, amnesia doesn t result in the loss of all memory or identity. Amnesia affects our short-term, or anteograde memory, and our ability to learn and retain new information. What s interesting and often surprising in amnesia cases is that other regions of the brain continue to function normally, such as long-term memory. But damage to even one area, such as short-term memory, can dramatically affect our ability to navigate through daily life.Neuroscientists are learning from abnormal brain functioning, such as amnesia, to identify normal brain patterns. For instance, the interplay of brain regions and their role in thoughts, understanding, and behavior are now better understood.For a more detailed breakdown of the human brain, go to the Brain Exploration feature of this site.Dr. Verfaellie contributed to an article about memory distortions in amnesic patients, published in MIT s Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, When True Recognition Suppresses False Recognition: Evidence from Amnesic Patients. http://mitpress.mit.edu/journals/JOCN/jcn10602.pdf.
also in: Class note Educational Eulo General psychology Joseph Psy101 Psych class notes Tharney Ucc Union county college
V4 - The Responsive Brain
from Film by Joe on July 05, 2008
Duration: 1636
Duration: 1636
The Responsive Brain is the fourth program in the DISCOVERING PSYCHOLOGY series. This program explores how the brain alters its structure and functioning in response to social situations. You ll learn about the impact of different stimuli on human and animal brains, from the effect of human touch on premature babies to the effect of social status on the health of baboons. Dr. Russell Fernald is a neuroethologist at Stanford University. Neuroethology integrates brain science with the study of behavior in natural habitats. The goal is to illustrate the interaction among brain, behavior, and environment. Dr. Fernald s long-term work focuses on the African cichlid fish and how its social system regulates not only brain structures, but also bodily functions.When a male cichlid fish recognizes an opportunity to become the dominant male, his body turns bright colors. The male fish then chases and attacks other male cichlid fish in an attempt to dominate and defend his territory. The physiological color change results from a response in the hypothalamus in the brain. In the cichlid fish, the signaling peptide cells grow eight times larger, sending the brain eight times the signal. The result is an enlargement of the fish gonads, physiologically preparing the fish to spawn with females.When the cichlid fish loses control of the territory, he loses his bright coloring. Some fish, however, will then go into hiding, turn on the color signals of dominance, and pretend that they are still dominant for a period lasting up to three weeks.The human brain also contains the hypothalamus. Neuroethologists hypothesize that behavioral responses parallel to those cichlid fish take place in humans, beginning at puberty. Dr. Fernald s research illustrates one example of how animal and human brains receive and translate signals from the social environment, resulting in physiological change.
also in: Class note Educational Eulo General psychology Joseph Psy101 Psych class notes Tharney Ucc Union county college
V5 - The Developing Child
from Film by Joe on July 05, 2008
Duration: 1695
Duration: 1695
The Developing Child is the fifth program in the DISCOVERING PSYCHOLOGY series. This program introduces examples of cognitive, perceptual, and behavioral development in children. You ll explore the roles of heredity and environment in child development, and children s incremental understanding of such phenomena as object permanence, symbolic reasoning, and perception of visual depth.One of the most distinctive human characteristics is the ability to understand and use symbols. We have a variety of symbol systems in our everyday lives. We use language, we read, we use pictures, and we understand computer programs. We re not born with this ability, so what I m studying are the earliest forms of symbolic reasoning that a child understands, and when that cognitive ability to reason develops.Specifically, I m concerned with a child s understanding of a scale model, a symbol, that represents a larger space. When the child sees the scale model of a miniature playroom, does the child understand that this little playroom represents a bigger room? And when does a child acquire symbolic understanding? The interesting feature of this research is that we see an abrupt change between ages two-and-a-half and three in a child s ability to understand scale models. When we experiment with scale models of playrooms, the two-and-a-half-year-old doesn t understand the relationship between the symbolic room and the actual room, and instead treats it as a separate object. The three-year-old, on the other hand, understands immediately that the model is a symbol for an actual room.In becoming symbolic creatures, we learn to think abstractly. At age three, children acquire the ability to think about things in two different ways at the same time: as both an object and a symbol for something else. Acquiring symbolic understanding is an important milestone in the cognitive development that helps us figure out how the world operates. Later in life, for example, we use it to read maps and understand languages. This research helps us appreciate the complexity of human thought in young children. The clearer our knowledge of what children know, the better we can work with them as educators and as parents.
also in: Class note Educational Eulo General psychology Joseph Psy101 Psych class notes Tharney Ucc Union county college
V6 - Language Development
from Film by Joe on July 05, 2008
Duration: 1696
Duration: 1696
Language Development is the sixth program in the DISCOVERING PSYCHOLOGY series. This program outlines the development of language in children. It highlights linguist Noam Chomsky s theories about the human brain s predisposition to understand language, and then profiles three scientists working on aspects of psycholinguistics.One of our main concerns as psycholinguists is figuring out the strategies that children use to discover the grammar of their languages. If you ask ordinary parents how their child learned to talk, they would probably say, He just imitated. What s the problem? Well, one problem is that if you listen to what children say, they often say things they couldn t have imitated. So a child might say something like I breaked the glass or I falled down. Adults don t say things like breaked and falled, but children do. These errors are to us the best evidence that the child is doing something creative. The child is in fact working out the structure of the grammar. When you hear a child saying things like breaked and falled, this means that the child has worked out the pattern for forming the past tense in English. English doesn t always follow that pattern, but the child has discovered a pattern.All through the years of language learning, the child is struggling between two opposite problems. On the one hand, he or she wants to adapt language, a particular language, to the natural patterns of thought. On the other hand, the child has to accommodate to the particular grammar of that language. The result, of course, is our adult linguistic capabilities. But along the way, if you look carefully, you can see the interplay between these two factors.Language is perhaps the most complex cognitive product we have. It s something that all human beings acquire within the first few years of life, regardless of the circumstances in which they grow up, and to a great extent regardless even of their intelligence. Language reflects something about the basic nature of the human mind. The fact that language is universally so patterned, and that it universally follows such stages of development in its acquisition by children, raises deep questions about the organization of knowledge.
also in: Class note Educational Eulo General psychology Joseph Psy101 Psych class notes Tharney Ucc Union county college
V8 - Learning
from Film by Joe on July 05, 2008
Duration: 1637
Duration: 1637
Learning is the eighth program in the DISCOVERING PSYCHOLOGY series. This program discusses the basic principles of how we learn; classical, instrumental, and operant conditioning; and the role that stimuli and consequences play in learned behavior and habits. You ll explore how renowned researchers Ivan Pavlov, B. F. Skinner, Edward Thorndike, and John B. Watson contributed to what we know about human and animal learning.In the study of behavior, operant behavior is affected by the environment, and operative conditioning is used to reinforce behavioral change. Behavioral psychologist Dr. Howard Rachlin used operant conditioning to study ways of developing self-control in pigeons.Dr. Rachlin chose to use pigeons because they can be a particularly impulsive subject. The experiment prompted the pigeons to peck one button once for a small bit of food, and another button 15 times for a larger amount. When presented with a choice between a small but immediate portion of food or a large but delayed portion of food, pigeons chose the small, short-term reward. But when Dr. Rachlin s team put a pigeon in a box with two buttons that both required 15 pecks for any amount of food at all, the pigeon ultimately chose the button that offered the larger amount.Eventually, the pigeons learned to choose a larger amount of food by pecking a button 15 times and then waiting four seconds for the food, as opposed to choosing a more immediate but smaller reward. Dr. Rachlin s experiment illustrated that a pattern of behavior can reinforce the choices that lead to self-control. Parallel human experiences include healthy behavioral changes such as cultivating good exercise habits, quitting smoking, or finding alternative outlets for anger and stress.Mary Ann Chapman expands on Dr. Rachlin s findings, and how the principles of operant conditioning can be used to overcome bad habits or addictions. http://www.findarticles.com/cf_0/m1175/5_32/55625498/p1/article.jhtml?term=bad+choices (Scroll down past the header for the article.)
also in: Behavioral psychologist Chose Class note Educational Elayed Eulo Food General psychology Joseph Learning Operant behavior Pigeons Portion Psy101 Psych class notes Short-term reward Small Study of behavior Tharney Ucc Union county college
V9 - Remebering and Forgetting
from Film by Joe on July 05, 2008
Duration: 1636
Duration: 1636
Remembering and Forgetting is the ninth program in the DISCOVERING PSYCHOLOGY series. This program looks at the complexity of memory: how images, ideas, language, physical actions, even sounds and smells are translated into codes that are represented in the memory and retrieved as needed.Memory is defined as stored information. When we take in information a lecture, for example neurotransmitters in the brain are working to filter and store the information in memory. While it sounds simple, memory is a complex and dynamic process that relies on a series of factors.At a very basic level, the process involves the hippocampus in the brain taking information from the environment, encoding it, and changing it into a form that the cerebral cortex can then store, retain, and retrieve. Through each step a memory neurotransmitter called acetylcholine transmits the needed nerve impulses.What we know about memory is also instructive about why we forget. In chronic memory loss and dementia, the acetylcholine transmission is impaired. In the most severe cases of memory loss, like Alzheimer s disease, not only is the acetylcholine connection devastated, but the cortex also gradually deteriorates and the brain acquires toxic substances.Recent research into memory, forgetting, and the advancement of Alzheimer s disease focuses on the ways the eye-blink classical conditioning tests, demonstrated in the program, can predict the earliest onset of dementia and Alzheimer s disease. Because Alzheimer s disease kills cells and its pathology is irreversible, early detection is the only hope for a cure or prevention.Doctors and researchers are working to develop a vaccine for Alzheimer s disease. The vaccine would block the toxins that accumulate in the brain and preserve the acetylcholine connection that is so vital to memory.Visit Diana Woodruff-Pak s home page at Temple University. The site includes a schematic of eye-blink classical conditioning, brain scans of the cerebellum and hippocampus, as well as a bibliography of books and articles. http://astro.temple.edu/~pak/
also in: Class note Educational Eulo Forgetting General psychology Joe eulo Joseph Psy101 Psy101 videos Psych class notes Remebering Tharney Ucc Union county college
V10 - Cognitive Processess
from Film by Joe on July 05, 2008
Duration: 1693
Duration: 1693
Cognitive Processess is the tenth program in the DISCOVERING PSYCHOLOGY series. This program explores the evolution of cognitive psychology and how we take in information. Cognitive psychology spans a vast range of study, from the parts of the brain used in reading to the computer s impact on the study of how humans think.Researcher Dr. Robert Glaser explains how the process of organizing knowledge in sophisticated patterns enables people to become experts.One of the studies we ve conducted on cognitive processes involves trying to understand what it means for people to be an expert. First, we want to understand the performance differences between experts in a field and relative novices in the same field. This contrast gives us some very interesting information and establishes the goals of learning and teaching in acquiring expert cognitive skill.A consistent finding about people who are very competent in various areas of knowledge like mathematics or science, chess playing, or reading x-rays, is that they develop a particular organization in their knowledge. In other words, their knowledge is highly structured so that when they look at problems, they recognize particular patterns that are meaningful to them. When young children look at a page, they see words that have meaning to them. When older children or adults look at a page, they see much larger patterns of meaning.For a long time, an accepted theory was that people who were very good at what they do just had better memory. But studies of chess players, for example, revealed not that they remember entire games in their heads, but that when they look at a chess board, they see a whole configuration of pieces that would be meaningless to a novice.One thing that experts see, then, is a highly patterned organization in the problems they re presented with. A novice sees surface features of a problem. A novice s knowledge is much more fragmented, less integrated. Experts also use their knowledge to solve problems, a practice that assesses and strengthens what they know.These characteristics of competence are the hallmark of instruction. Now that we know some of the patterns in learning and excelling, we can design learning institutions to maximize performance and assessment.
also in: Class note Cognitive processess Educational Eulo General General psychology Joseph Psy101 Psy101 videos Psychology Psych class notes Tharney Ucc Union county college
Visons of Jazz (w/ out Narration)
from Film by Joe on June 22, 2008
Duration: 1313
Duration: 1313
This video was an English Honors Project based on the book "Jazz" by Toni Morrison. It took me 14 weeks to gather the images create the story line and put it together. I hope you enjoy it. Thanks
also in: 2007 Books Educational Ed flynn English Honors Jazz John russell Joseph eulo Morrison Project Shiela casey Ucc Union county college Visions















