ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1994, Elements of Applied Psychology provided an introductory survey of the major aspects of applied psychology at the time for students of psychology as a main or ancillary subject. It was the first text to investigate the pressures created by this increased interest in applied psychology, offering insight into the factors which had influenced its patterns and direction.

The book comprises 18 chapters, covering both the well-established fields of professional psychology, such as educational, clinical/counselling and occupational/organisational psychology, and areas of developing application at the time, including applied cognitive psychology, economic and health psychology, and psychology and law.

The text will still be of value to students considering possible career areas in psychology, students on psychology courses pondering choice of specialism and those students taking psychology as a subsidiary subject in one of the areas covered. It is also consistent with the increasing link between the academic community and practitioners. It will serve to increase the understanding and exchange.

chapter 2|32 pages

The Child as Learner

chapter 4|13 pages

Counselling Psychology

chapter 5|21 pages

The Nature of Abnormal Behaviour

chapter 7|19 pages

Clinical Neuropsychology

chapter 8|21 pages

Recruitment and Selection

chapter 9|14 pages

Assessment and Appraisal

chapter 10|23 pages

Organisational Psychology

chapter 11|27 pages

Training

chapter 12|17 pages

Applied Cognitive Psychology

chapter 15|23 pages

Environmental Psychology

chapter 16|16 pages

Health Psychology

chapter 17|21 pages

Psychology and Law

chapter 18|17 pages

Futures for Applied Psychology