FYBA Psychology Syllabus of Mumbai University – [PAPER I Fundamentals of Psychology]
The F.Y.B.A Psychology course covers the "Fundamental concepts of Psychology" and is an introductory course which alone encompasses diverse topics and basic concepts of psychology. The first year provides for the foundation of the higher courses. Therefore planned studying and through understanding of the concepts will benefit in laying a strong foundation for future years.
The Objective of this course is :
1. To impart knowledge of the basic concepts and modern trends in Psychology
2. To foster interest in the subject of Psychology and to create a foundation for further studies in Psychology
3. To make the students aware of the applications of Psychological concepts in various fields so that they understand the relevance of Psychology in different areas of life
**Please Note : The syllabus w.e.f. academic year 2016 has been modified compared to its earlier years.
Now, lets understand the syllabus in details!
The entire year of FYBA is divided into two semesters SEM I and SEM II
SEM I [Fundamentals of Psychology: Part I (Credits = 3)] covers the below mentioned Syllabus :
Unit 1. The story of Psychology and thinking critically with psychological science
a) What is psychology? Psychology’s roots; psychological science is born; psychological science develops; Contemporary Psychology: Psychology’s biggest question, three main levels of analysis, and subfields; Close-up: Improve your retention and grades
b) The need for psychological science - Did we know all along? Hindsight bias; Overconfidence; perceiving order in random events; the scientific attitude: curious, sceptical and humble; Critical thinking
c) How do psychologists ask and answer questions? The scientific method; description; correlation; experimentation; statistical reasoning in everyday life: describing data; significant differences
d) Frequently asked questions about Psychology
Unit 2: The Biology of Mind
a) Biology, Behaviour and Mind
b) Neural Communication – neurons, how neurons communicate, how neurotransmitters influence us
c) The Nervous System - the peripheral and central nervous systems
d) The Endocrine System
e) The Brain - The tools of discovery: having our head examined; older brain structures; the cerebral cortex; our divided brain; right-left differences in the intact brain; Close-Up: Handedness
Unit 3: Learning
a) How do we learn?
b) Classical Conditioning - Pavlov’s experiments; Pavlov’s legacy; Operant Conditioning - Skinner’s experiments; Skinner’s legacy; Contrasting classical and operant conditioning; Close-up: training our partners
c) Biology, Cognition, and Learning - Biological constraints on conditioning; cognition’s influence on conditioning
d) Learning by Observation- Mirrors and imitation in the brain; applications of observational learning; Thinking critically about: Does viewing media violence trigger violent behaviour?
Unit 4: Memory
a) Studying Memory; Memory Models
b) Building Memories - encoding and automatic processing; encoding and effortful processing
c) Memory Storage - Retaining Information in the brain; the Amygdala, emotions, and memory; Synaptic Changes
d) Retrieval: getting information out - measures of retention; retrieval cues
e) Forgetting - Forgetting and the two-track mind; encoding failure; storage decay; retrieval failure; close-up: retrieving passwords
f) Memory construction errors - misinformation and imagination effects; source amnesia; discerning true and false memories; children’s eyewitness recall; repressed or constructed memories of abuse?
g) Improving memory
SEM II [Fundamentals of Psychology: Part II (Credits = 3)] covers the below mentioned Syllabus :
Unit 1. Thinking, Language and Intelligence
a) Thinking – Concepts; Problem solving strategies and obstacles; Forming good and bad decisions and judgments; Thinking critically about: the fear factor- Why we fear the wrong things. Do other species share our cognitive skills?
b) Language: Language structure; language development; close-up: living in a silent world; the brain and language; do other species have language?
c) Thinking and Language: Language influences thinking; thinking in images
d) What is Intelligence? Is intelligence one general ability or several specific abilities? Intelligence and creativity; emotional intelligence; is intelligence neurologically measurable?
e) Assessing Intelligence - the origins of intelligence testing; modern tests of mental abilities; principles of test construction
Unit 2. Motivation and Emotion
a) Motivational Concepts - Instincts and evolutionary psychology; drives and incentives; optimum arousal; a hierarchy of motives
b) Hunger - The physiology and psychology of hunger; obesity and weight control; Close-up: Waist management
c) The Need to Belong - Aiding survival; wanting to belong; sustaining relationships; the pain of ostracism; social networking
d) Cognition and Emotion - Historical emotion theories; cognition can define emotion: Schachter and Singer; Cognition may not precede emotion: Zajonc, LeDoux, and Lazaruse) Embodied Emotion - Emotions and the autonomic nervous system; the physiology of emotions; Expressed emotion – Detecting emotions in others; thinking critically about: lie detection; gender, emotion and nonverbal behaviour; culture and emotional expression; the effects of facial expression; Experienced Emotion – Anger; Happiness; Close-up: Want to be happier?
Unit 3: Personality
a) Psychodynamic Theories: Freud’s psychoanalytic perspective - exploring the unconscious; the neo-Freudian and psychodynamic theorists; assessing unconscious processes; evaluating Freud’s psychoanalytic perspective and modern views of the unconscious
b) Humanistic theories - Abraham Maslow’s self-actualizing person; Carl Rogers’ person-centred perspective; assessing the self; evaluating humanistic theories
c) Trait Theories - Exploring and assessing traits; thinking critically about: how to be a “successful” astrologer or palm reader; The Big Five factors; evaluating trait theories
d) Social cognitive theories - reciprocal influences; personal control; Close-up: toward a more positive psychology; assessing behaviour in situations; evaluating social-cognitive theories
e) Exploring the self - the benefits of self esteem; self-serving bias
Unit 4: Statistics in Psychology: Understanding Data
a) The tables are turned: a psychologist becomes a research subject
b) Descriptive statistics: frequency distribution
c) Measures of central tendency
d) Measures of variability
e) Z-scores and the normal curve
f) Correlation
g) Inferential statistics
Books for Study prescribed by the University of Mumbai for the 1st year of Psychology students (FYBA Psychology) that covers all the topics of both the semesters are mentioned below:
1. Myers, D. G. (2013). Psychology. 10th edition; International edition. New York: Worth
Palgrave Macmillan, Indian reprint 2013
2. A separate book is prescribed for Study for "Unit 4. Statistics in Psychology":
Hockenbury, D.H., &Hockenbury, S.E. (2013). Discovering Psychology. 6th edition. New York: Worth publishers