Course Information
- Course Title: Cognitive Psychology
- Course Code: —
- Course Type: Compulsory
- Credit Hours: 3 (2 lecture + 1 lab)
- ECTS: 6
- Language of Instruction: English / Arabic / Kurdish
- Level: Undergraduate – Year 3
- Department: Psychology
- College: Education
- Academic Year: 2025–2026
- Semester: Fall (6th semester)
Course Description
This course introduces students to the scientific study of human cognition, focusing on how people acquire, process, store, and use information. Core cognitive processes such as attention, perception, memory, and language are examined through established theories and empirical findings.
In addition to theoretical instruction, the course includes a light, lecture-hall-based practical component that allows students to experience cognitive processes through structured tasks and simple experiments. These practical activities emphasize observation, performance patterns, and interpretation rather than complex experimental design or advanced statistics.
Course Learning Outcomes
By the end of the course, students will be able to:
- Identify core cognitive processes and their main theoretical models
- Explain how cognitive psychology studies mental processes indirectly through performance
- Perform basic cognitive tasks related to attention, memory, perception, and language
- Record and compare simple performance measures such as reaction time and accuracy
- Identify patterns in cognitive performance across different task conditions
- Interpret cognitive performance using appropriate scientific language
- Distinguish between observation, interpretation, and proof in cognitive research
- Understand the limits of inference in cognitive psychology
- Prepare short practical reports based on hands-on cognitive tasks
- Present and discuss practical findings in small groups
Weekly Course Schedule
| Week | Main Topic | Practical Focus |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Introduction to Cognitive Psychology | Practical orientation & basics of cognitive experiments |
| 2 | Emergence of Cognitive Psychology | Simple information-processing tasks |
| 3 | Early Cognitive Experiments (Ebbinghaus) | Memory tasks & forgetting demonstration |
| 4 | Attention: Types & Theories | Selective attention tasks (e.g., Stroop-type) |
| 5 | External Effects on Attention | Distraction & divided attention tasks |
| 6 | Perception | Perceptual organization & illusion tasks |
| 7 | Development of Perception | Sensory discrimination activities |
| 8 | Midterm Exam | — |
| 9 | Internal Effects on Attention | Cognitive load & fatigue tasks |
| 10 | Memory: Encoding, Storage, Retrieval | Free recall & recognition tasks |
| 11 | Sensory Memory & Short-Term Memory | Digit span & visual memory tasks |
| 12 | Student Presentations | Practical task presentations |
| 13 | Long-Term Memory | Semantic vs episodic memory tasks |
| 14 | Language | Word recognition & sentence processing tasks |
| 15 | Student Presentations | Group project presentations |
| 16 | Course Review | Integration of theory & practice |
| 17 | Final Exam | — |
Practical Component Description
Practical sessions are conducted inside the lecture hall, not in the experimental psychology laboratory. Characteristics:
- Short, structured tasks. No complex experimental designs
- No advanced statistics. Focus on group-level patterns, not individual assessment
Each practical activity follows the same logic:
Task → Performance → Pattern → Cognitive Process
Assessment & Evaluation
Component Weight Midterm Exam 30% Final Exam 40% Practical Activities & Reports 20% Practical Presentations & Participation 10% Total 100% Course Policies
Participation: Active participation in practical sessions is expected. Students may alternate between participant and observer roles
Ethics: Participation in tasks is voluntary. No task involves psychological or physical harm. Individual performance is confidential
Code of Conduct
- Plagiarism, cheating, data fabrication
- Unauthorized collaboration on individual work
- Multiple submission without permission
- Participant well-being is must
- Informed consent is required for all research
- Maintain data confidentiality and integrity