Psychology of Religion Psy Fall 2009 Dr. McCabe

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Psychology of Religion Psy 490.1 Fall 2009 Dr. McCabe Instructor: Laurel McCabe, Ph.D. Office: Stev 3092A Location: Stev 3046, Mon 2-5:40 p.m. Office Hrs: Mon 6-6:30, Tu 2-4:30 pm email: laurel.mccabe@sonoma.edu Phone: (707) 664-2130 This course examines how the field of psychology has studied and understood religion and religious and spiritual experience. We will be reading about current research and thinking in the field of religion and spirituality, visiting a sacred site of your choice, and doing a research project on some issue of special interest to you. Text Hood, R., Hill, P. & Spilka, B. (2009). The psychology of religion: An empirical approach (4 th Ed.). New York: Guilford. Reader The Reader will be available the second week of classes at the College Center Copy Shop, 1435 E. Cotati, 2 blocks down from the campus, hours Mon-Fri 8am-6pm, Sat. 10 a.m.-3 p.m., phone 792-0995. You will need it for the fourth week of readings to be read by Sept. 21. Students with Special Needs If you are a student with special learning needs and you think you may require accommodations, your first step is to register with the campus office of Disabled Student Services, Salazar 1049, phone 664-2677. DSS will provide you with written confirmation of your verified disability and authorize recommended accommodations. You then present this recommendation to the instructor, who will discuss the accommodations with you. Evaluation There are three in-class midterms, a sacred site visit with short write-up and class presentation about it; and one research project with short presentation about it and a paper on it. Through the semester we ll be learning about different assessment measures and research methodologies, so we ll be doing in-class work with scales and methods. Active engaged participation is essential for the class. This and on-time attendance can bring your final grade up or down. The breakdown for the final grade is as follows: Midterm 1: Oct. 12. 10% Midterm 2: Nov. 9. 10% Midterm 3: Dec. 14. 10% Project 1: Sacred site visit, completed by Oct 5, with 2 page writeup. 10% Presentation 1: On sacred site visit, with pictures/powerpoint, 5. 10% Research Project: Paper due Dec. 7. 30% Presentation 2: Presentation of research project, 5-10. 10%

Research Project. The research project is designed to get you thinking about issues in psychology and religion. You re asked to look through the readings and think about your knowledge of religious behavior, and come up with a topic that you d like to research. You ll do research on this area, go out into the community and gather information if relevant, synthesize what you ve learned, suggest ideas for research using your knowledge of research methodologies, and present your ideas to the class. All of this will be written up in a paper. We ll meet in small groups arranged by interest areas to develop ideas for the project. Databases & Resources The Psychology of Religion text can provide you with good references for your topic, so check the chapters references listed in the back of the book. You ll also need to know how to use the library resources and databases for the research project, as most current articles are available online through searching databases. Make sure to attend the library s help sessions on using databases if you don t know how to use them. Major journals in the field are listed below. Journals The International Journal for the Psychology of Religion Review of Religious Research Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion Psychology of Religion and Spirituality Mental Health, Religion, and Culture Journal of Psychology and Theology Journal of Personality and Social Psychology Journal of Religion and Health Journal of Religious Gerontology Spirituality and Health International Journal of Psychology and Christianity Journal of Psychology and Judaism Journal of Psychology and Theology Web Sites Map of world religions http://www.wamware.com/world-religions/map.htm Pluralism Project, Harvard, Guidelines for Research www.pluralism.org/research/guidelines.php Research guide, Santa Clara University http://scu.edu/cas/religiousstudies/lrp/research/guide/main.cfm Association of Religion Data Archives http://www.thearda.com/ Center for the Study of Religion and culture http://www.iupui.edu/~raac/home.html Society for the Scientific Study of Religion http://www.sssrweb.org/links.cfm International Association for the Psychology of Religion http://www.iapr.de/index.htm Michael Nielsen s Psychology of Religion pages http://www.psywww.com/psyrelig/ Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life http://pewforum.org/worldaffairs/countries/?countryid=222 Youtube video world religions http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bd5hvxgi_bq

Schedule of Readings Aug. 22 Ramadan begins (Islam; Mohammed s revelation of the Koran; fasting sunrise to sunset) Aug. 31 What is Religion? What is Psychology? The psychology of religion, Ch. 1, 2 Sept. 7 Labor Day: No Class Sept. 14 Religious and Spiritual Experience The psychology of religion, Ch. 10 Sept. 19-20 Rosh Hashanah (Jewish; new year, time of introspection, abstinence, prayer) Sept. 20 Ramadan ends (Islam) Sept. 21 Religion and Attachment The psychology of religion, Ch. 4, pp. 89-108 Reader, Kirkpatrick, Attachment theory and religious experience Reader, Beit-Hallahmi, Object relations theory and religious experience Sept. 28 Religion and Neuroscience. Furlough Day: No Class The psychology of religion, Ch. 3 Sept. 28 Yom Kippur (Jewish; day of atonement with fasting and repentance) Oct. 5 Religion and Neuroscience Reader, Newberg, D Aquili & Rause, from Why God won t go away Reader, Fuller, The chemistry of consciousness Oct. 12 Religion, Morality, Prejudice The psychology of religion, Ch. 12 Midterm 1 Oct. 19 Religion and Health The psychology of religion, Ch. 13 Term project proposal due Oct. 26 Mystical Experience The psychology of religion, Ch. 11 Nov. 2 Religion, Young Adulthood The psychology of religion, Ch. 5

Nov. 9 Religion in Adulthood The psychology of religion, Ch. 6 Midterm 2 Nov. 16 Religion and Violence Reader, Jones, Blood that cries out from the earth, Ch. 2, 5, 6 Nov. 23 Religion and Pilgrimage. Furlough Day: No Class Reader, from Wolfe s One thousand roads to Mecca Nov. 25-28 Hajj (Islam; pilgrimage rites in Mecca) Nov. 27 Eid al Adha (Islam; Feast of sacrifice concluding hajj) Nov. 30 Religion and Pilgrimage Reader, Turner, Pilgrimage as a liminoid phenomenon Dec. 7 Religion and Aging The psychology of religion, Ch. 7 Dec. 12-19 Hanukkah (Jewish; festival of lights commemorating Maccobees retaking temple in Jerusalem) Dec. 14 Midterm 3 Final 2-3:50pm

Psy 490.1, Psychology of Religion Fall 2009 Prof. McCabe Readings Kirkpatrick, Attachment theory and religious experience Beit-Hallahmi, Object relations theory and religious experience Newberg, D Auqili & Rause, from Why god won t go away Fuller, The chemistry of consciousness Jones, from Blood that cries out from the earth Wolfe, from One thousand roads to Mecca Turner & Turner, Pilgrimage as a liminoid phenomenon Reader References Beit-Hallahmi, B. (1995). Object relations theory and religious experience. In R. Hood (Ed.), Handbook of religious experience (pp. 254-268). Birmingham, AL: Religious Education Press. Newberg, A., D Auqili, E. & Rause, V. (2001). Why god won t go away: Brain science and the biology of belief (pp. 1-127). New York: Ballantine. Fuller, R. (2008). Spirituality in the flesh: Bodily sources of religious experience (pp. 75-98). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Hill, P. & Hood, R. (Eds.) (1999). Measures of religiosity. Birmingham, AL: Religious Education Press. Jones, J. W. (2008). Blood that cries out from the earth: The psychology of religious terrorism. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Kirkpatrick, L. (1995). Attachment theory and religious experience. In R. Hood (Ed.), Handbook of religious experience (pp. 446-475). Birmingham, AL: Religious Education Press. Turner, V. & Turner, E. (1978). Pilgrimage as a liminoid phenomenon. In V. Turner & E. Turner, Image and pilgrimage in Christian culture (pp. 1-39, Appendix). New York: Columbia University Press. Wolfe, M. (Ed.) (1997). One thousand roads to Mecca: Ten centuries of travelers writing about the Muslim pilgrimage. New York: Grove Press.