photo by Gina Alexander
Degree
Ph.D. Experimental Psychology, University of Utah, 1984
Positions
Southern Utah University
Assistant Professor 1986-1991
Associate Professor 1991-1998
Professor 1998-2001Courses taught (undergraduate):
- Statistics in Psychology
- Cybernetics, Self, and Society
- Models, Methods, and Professional Issues in Psychology
- Experimental Research Design
- History and Systems of Psychology (capstone course)
- Surviving in a Technological Age (honors course, team-taught)
- Eastern Thought for Western Thinkers (honors course, team-taught)
- Mind, Body, and Health
- Readings in Transpersonal Psychology
- Andean Mysticism
- Introduction to Psychotherapy (sections on Gestalt and Transpersonal Therapies)
- Physiological Psychology
- Cognitive Psychology
- Abnormal Psychology
- Personality Theory
- Senior Seminar (capstone course).
University of Utah
Adjunct Professor 2002-2005
Associate Professor 2005-presentCourses taught
- Statistical Methods in Psychology (undergraduate)
- Research Methods in Psychology (undergraduate)
- Quantitative Methods I and II (graduate)
- Andean Meditation (for the Lifelong Learning Center)
Since 1994 I have been studying the epistemology of indigenous people who live in remote villages in the high Andes of Peru. This has involved seven trips to Peru to study with the paq'os (roughly translatable as 'mystics') who live there, primarily working with Américo Yabar and through his help with paq'os of the Q'ero and Mollamarka people. For more information on this project see my Andean Research Home Page (for an academic coverage) or SalkaWind (for a more personal view).
I have long been interested in the use of computers to enhance the educational experience of my students. I also have a long-time interest in computer programming. Below I have included links to some of my more recent projects that I have written in the JAVA computer language (which allows the programs to be run over the internet).