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PSY 245: Industrial/Organizational Psychology: Explore Topics

Background Information

Choosing a Topic

This page will guide you through choosing a topic for your I/O Psychology research paper or assignment.

Step 1 - Read your assignment

Right after you receive the assignment, read through your assignment and make sure you understand what your instructor wants. The assignment may be very specific, giving you only a few choices, or very open, allowing you to pick based on your own interests.

Double check your idea with your instructor to make sure it meets his or her expectations. Ask any questions you have about the assignment. A quick email or a word after class could save you having to start all over again!

Your instructor might also be able to make some suggestions if you are truely stuck. Or, if you have several ideas that seem equally good, your instructor could help you choose the one that's the best fit for the class.

Step 2 - Get some background information

It may be that you have no previous information about I/O Psychology.  That's okay! You are graded on what you learn from the assignment, not what you know when you start.

If Psychology is really new to you, you might not know what it covers. Take a look at some of our resources in the Background Information Box, and see if a smaller topic or chapter is interesting to you. Page through your textbook or recommended reading. Was there one aspect that you wanted to learn more about?

By browsing the resources in the box to the left, you might find topics you have never heard anything about. For example:

  •   Work-life balance
  •   Organizational change
  •   Human capital

Step 3 - Consider your own interests

No one says that research has to be boring! In fact, it should be a chance for you to steer your own learning.

If you are taking a class in an area outside your major or main program of study, can you tie your topic back to your major? For example:

  •    Organizational culture AND Nursing
  •    Human capital AND Education
  •    Organizational impact of technology(ies)

Choose something that will keep you interested. It will help you write a better paper or make a better presentation.

Step 4 - Get ready to research!

Once you've chosen your topic, doing a little extra right now will help your research and final product go more smoothly.

Change your topic into a question.

   This helps you stay on track. Every time you find a source, ask "Does this help answer my question?"

   This also helps you create a strong thesis or main idea, because it should be a direct answer to your question.

        Ex. Take "emotional intelligence AND management" a great idea for a topic, and make it "Are people with higher emotional intelligence more effective managers?" 

Brainstorm related words.

   Not everyone uses the same word for something. Think of other words that people may use to describe your topic.

         Ex. Emotional Intelligence: emotional maturity, emotion recognition, emotional development

It may be helpful to check a dictionary or read a basic overview in order to see what words are used to describe your topics, especially by the experts.