Week |
Subject |
Related Preparation |
1) |
Greetings. Explanation of course content and procedure, syllabus.
Practice of greetings and introducing yourselves to other classmates, asking questions and saying what is your major, what do you do, what are your hobbies, where do you live?
Fundamental syntactical issues in Persian language covered basically in Persian I & II class and further.
|
Compiled Material |
2) |
Suffixed possessive pronouns or pronominal enclitics |
Compiled Material |
3) |
Reflexive pronoun self and ezafe construction of self with independent pronouns |
Compiled Material |
4) |
Comparative adjectives; superlative adjective |
Compiled Material |
5) |
Infinitive forms in Persian, past and present stems
List of most common Persian infinitives/verbs, with their stems; reading together in class and study them
|
Compiled Material |
6) |
Possessives, self, adjectives, past and present stems/tenses in class |
Compiled Material |
7) |
Revision |
Compiled Material |
8) |
Midterm Exam |
|
9) |
Present indicative in Persian and its varying meanings and expressions; two forms of verb ‘to be’ in Persian in the present and past tense |
Compiled Material |
10) |
Specific marker of direct object in Persian; question words of quantity; word of counting a unit, item, piece, part etc; propositions in Persian & expressions using propositions |
Compiled Material |
11) |
Interrogative formal and colloquial words/expressions
Adverbial words/expressions of situation, time and location
|
Compiled Material |
12) |
The present perfect tense in Persian called ‘relational past’ |
Compiled Material |
13) |
The past perfect tense
The present subjunctive
The past progressive
|
Compiled Material |
14) |
Pronominal [possessive] suffixes or pronominal enclitics used with some common verbs
Sensation words and verbs
|
Compiled Material |
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Program Outcomes |
Level of Contribution |
1) |
Develop close interest in human mind and behavior, and attain critical thinking skills (in particular the ability to evaluate psychological theories using empirical evidence), as well as appreciating psychology as an evidence based science. |
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2) |
Gain a biopsychosocial understanding of human behavior, namely, the biological, psychological, social determinants of behavior. |
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3) |
Acquire theoretical and applied knowledge and learn about basic psychological concepts and perspectives |
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4) |
Familiarize with methodology and data evaluation techniques by being aware of scientific research methods (i.e. correlational, experimental, longitudinal, case study). |
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5) |
Employ ethical sensitivity while doing assessment, research or working with groups. |
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6) |
Familiarize with the essential perspectives of psychology (cognitive, developmental, clinical, social, behavioral, and biological). |
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7) |
Get the opportunity and skills to evaluate qualitative and quantitative data, write reports, and present them. |
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8) |
Attain preliminary knowledge for psychological measurement and evaluation. |
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9) |
To have a basic knowledge of other disciplines (e.g. sociology, history, political science, communication studies, philosophy, anthropology, literature, law, art, etc) that can contribute to psychology and to be able to make use of this knowledge in understanding and interpreting of psychological process. |
4 |