This course will highlight the most interesting experiments within the field of psychology, discussing the implications of those studies for our understanding of the human mind and human behavior. We will explore the brain and some of the cognitive abilities it supports like memory, learning, attention, perception and consciousness. We will examine human development - both in terms of growing up and growing old - and will discuss the manner in which the behavior of others affect our own thoughts and behavior. Finally we will discuss various forms of mental illness and the treatments that are used to help those who suffer from them.
The fact of the matter is that humans routinely do amazing things without appreciating how interesting they are. However, we are also routinely influenced by people and events without always being aware of those influences. By the end of this course you will have gained a much better understanding and appreciation of who you are and how you work. And I can guarantee you that you'll learn things that you'll be telling your friends and family about, things that will fundamentally change the way you think of yourself and others. How can you resist that?!
This section is about your orientation to the Coursera interface and the logistics of the course.
What's included
2 readings
Show info about module content
2 readings•Total 20 minutes
Course Logistics•10 minutes
Links to Outside Resources•10 minutes
History & the Scientific Method
Module 2•2 hours to complete
Module details
This section is about exploring the introduction to the Science of Psychology. At the end of this first section you'll be able to identify and discuss some of the major movements in the Science of Psychology.
Lecture 6 - Knowledge Association (15:49 min)•16 minutes
Lecture 7 - Knowledge by Contrast (15:23 min)•15 minutes
The Matter of the Mind
Module 3•2 hours to complete
Module details
There was a time when one could study Psychology without linking phenomena back to the brain itself, but those days are slowly disappearing. Now every Psychology student, yourself included, is expected to have at least a general knowledge of brain organization and structure. At the end of this section you will be able to locate structures of the brain and discuss its organization.
What's included
8 videos
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 121 minutes
Lecture 1 - Brain Matter (20:20 min)•20 minutes
Lecture 2 - Your Light Switch (12:40 min)•13 minutes
Lecture 3 - Subcortical Regions (13:27 min)•13 minutes
Lecture 4 - The Occipital Lobe (10:59 min)•11 minutes
Lecture 5 - The Temporal Lobe (14:51 min)•15 minutes
Lecture 6 - The Parietal Lobe (16:07 min)•16 minutes
Lecture 7 - The Frontal Lobe (18:10 min)•18 minutes
Lecture 8 - Split Brain (14:40 min)•15 minutes
Sensation, Perception, Attention and Awareness
Module 4•2 hours to complete
Module details
This section is all about the systems our brain uses to get input from the world ... you will be able to recognize what those things around us are and where they are ... and be able to interpret who we are and how we fit.
What's included
8 videos
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 133 minutes
Lecture 1 - Outside In (14:26 min)•14 minutes
Lecture 2 - Point of Contact (20:24 min)•20 minutes
Lecture 3 - Perceiving What: Part 1 (18:38 min)•19 minutes
Lecture 4 - Perceiving What: Part 2 (17:50 min)•18 minutes
Lecture 5 - Perceiving Where (17:35 min)•18 minutes
Lecture 6 - Selection (16:38 min)•17 minutes
Lecture 7 - Self Awareness (13:21 min)•13 minutes
Lecture 8 - Theory of Mind (13:40 min)•14 minutes
Learning
Module 5•2 hours to complete
Module details
This section is all about learning and behaviourism. When you're done the videos you'll be able to name and describe the topic of learning and behaviour in contexts such as flirting and gambling!
What's included
8 videos1 assignment
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 117 minutes
Lecture 1 - Forces of Nature (15:18 min)•15 minutes
Lecture 2 - Rise of Behaviorism (15:59 min)•16 minutes
Lecture 3 - Learning (14:09 min)•14 minutes
Lecture 4 - Learning by Consequence (17:32 min)•18 minutes
This topic is Memory, and it's a big topic, and one I know a fair amount about. It was hard to figure out what to present and what to leave out. I tried to include some of the most interesting stuff. I hope you agree. After this section you'll be able to define and summarize topics such as False Memory and Amnesia.
What's included
8 videos
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 126 minutes
Lecture 1 - Memory is Not Singular: Part 1 (15:55 min)•16 minutes
Lecture 2 - Memory is Not Singular: Part 2 (24:34 min)•25 minutes
Lecture 8 - What is Not Forgotten (14:39 min)•15 minutes
The Social Mind
Module 7•2 hours to complete
Module details
This topic is Social Psychology and it features some of the most controversial experiments in psychology. Some of these will having you thinking very deeply for a long time after you see them. You'll have time to analyze and interpret our experience with conformity and authority.
What's included
8 videos
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 129 minutes
Lecture 1 - Conformity (13:51 min)•14 minutes
Lecture 2 - Authority (16:29 min)•16 minutes
Lecture 3 - Protecting the Self (15:04 min)•15 minutes
Lecture 4 - Good People Do Bad (16:25 min)•16 minutes
Lecture 6 - Schemas, Stereotypes and Prejudice (16:16 min)•16 minutes
Lecture 7 - Competition, Ignorance, Fear and Prejudice (18:28 min)•18 minutes
Lecture 8 - Attraction (20:15 min)•20 minutes
Mental Illness
Module 8•3 hours to complete
Module details
This topic is Clinical Psychology and you'll learn both about various clinical disorders, and about the therapies commonly used to treat them.You'll be able to extend this knowledge to different disorders. Be careful to not start diagnosing all your friends or family (or yourself!)
This module is all about you and is about extending our foundational knowledge in the field of psychology so you can discover and describe to others more of what's interesting to you. These curated videos are based on past course requests. We will add new ones as well from time to time as new cohorts make requests.
What's included
8 videos1 assignment
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 220 minutes
Lecture 1 - Sleep (24:59 min)•25 minutes
Lecture 2 - Dreams (20:58 min)•21 minutes
Lecture 3 - Hypnosis (38:49 min)•39 minutes
Lecture 4 - Stages of Development (26:21 min)•26 minutes
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R
RL
5·
Reviewed on Mar 30, 2021
Such an amazing course! Prof. Steve Joordens explains Psychology in a easy way, the lessons are very well prepared and I definitely lernt a lot. Thank you for providing such a good course for free :)
I
IO
5·
Reviewed on Feb 7, 2021
I am very happy to complete this course. I really thank the organizers and I wish to frankly say that I have learned a lot about human behavior and how we can appreciate our own capabilities.
R
RF
5·
Reviewed on Nov 16, 2017
this was the most usefull and interesting course I've ever take .I enjoyed every single lesson and I strongly recommend it to my friends and Colleagues.thank you very much for your efforts
What will I actually learn in this psychology course?
You'll learn how psychologists study the mind and behavior, and how major findings connect to everyday life. It starts with how psychology became a science, then builds into the brain and cognition, social behavior, and mental health. You'll also use those ideas in quizzes and a short peer-reviewed analysis of a current event.
Do I need any psychology background before starting?
No, you don't need prior psychology coursework to start. The course begins with how psychology emerged as a science and explains core ideas as it goes, so the early lessons set you up for later topics like learning, memory, and mental illness. Optional outside resources are available, but the assessed material comes from Professor Joordens' lectures.
Is this a beginner-friendly psychology course?
It is beginner-friendly if you want a wide survey of psychology and you're comfortable learning mainly through video lessons and quizzes. The course explains ideas through well-known experiments and examples, so you don't need specialist knowledge going in. It may feel less suited if you want deep research training or a project-heavy course.
How long does it take to complete?
Plan on about 23 hours in total, or roughly 2 to 3 weeks if you study around 10 hours a week. That gives you time to work through the lessons steadily and still leave room for quizzes and the final peer-reviewed assignment. The course includes video lessons, short readings, quizzes, and a short written assignment with peer review.
Are there exercises or projects in the course?
Yes, but the hands-on work is more analytical than lab-based. You'll check your understanding through quizzes and finish with a short peer-reviewed assignment where you apply a psychological concept to a current event. It's guided rather than open-ended, so the practice helps you use each idea as you learn it.
What topics are covered in this psychology course?
You'll cover the scientific method, how the brain supports cognition, how people learn and remember, how social settings shape behavior, and how mental disorders are diagnosed and treated. These topics are taught through classic studies and concrete cases, such as false memory or conformity, rather than through definitions alone. By the end, you'll have a broad map of how psychologists explain thought, behavior, and experience.
What can I actually do after finishing?
After finishing, you should be able to explain many everyday behaviors using core psychological concepts and discuss classic studies with more confidence. You'll be better able to judge psychological claims, distinguish correlation from causation, and compare broad approaches to mental health treatment. A realistic next step is analyzing a news story or social situation with a concept from the course and explaining your reasoning clearly.
Is it more theory or hands-on?
It's more conceptual than hands-on. Most of the learning comes through lessons that explain experiments, evidence, and major ideas, with quizzes and one peer-reviewed analysis to reinforce the material. It's a better fit if you want to understand psychology broadly rather than do lab-style practice.
Why choose this course over other psychology courses?
This course is a strong choice if you want psychology taught through memorable experiments and real examples, not just a list of terms. Professor Steve Joordens moves from the scientific method into topics like memory, social influence, and mental illness, and the course keeps linking those ideas back to everyday human behavior. If you want a wide, experiment-centered introduction with guided assessments instead of a narrow specialty course, this is a good fit.