Module Descriptors
PSYCHOLOGY OF CRIMINAL CONDUCT
PSYC50338
Key Facts
School of Health, Science and Wellbeing
Level 5
15 credits
Contact
Leader: Melanie Hall
Hours of Study
Scheduled Learning and Teaching Activities: 24
Independent Study Hours: 126
Total Learning Hours: 150
Assessment
  • EXAMINATION - UNSEEN IN EXAMINATION CONDITIONS weighted at 100%
Module Details
Module Additional Assessment Details
Summative assessment
An unseen 2 hour examination, contributing 100% of the overall module mark, which will assess outcomes 1, 2, and 3.

Formative learning
Peer and tutor feedback on independent and class based student activities. Feedback on practice exam questions.
Module Indicative Content
This module will explore some of the major psychological contributions towards understanding crime and criminal behaviour. Developmental, social and genetic contributions towards understanding the psychology of criminality and the individual experience of crime will be considered. Also included will be evaluations of the methodologies adopted by researchers in the field and the contributions of this psychological research towards understanding contemporary issues such as juvenile offending and violent offending.
Module Learning Strategies
12 x 2 hour class sessions. These will incorporate tutor led lectures, and tutor and student led interactive activities and discussions. These will include video, debates, paper-based exercises and case study analyses. During the course of the module students will also be expected to complete a series of ten tutor guided tasks and investigations which will form the basis of some class-based activities and discussions.
Module Special Admissions Requirements
Be registered on a Psychology or Crime and Deviance award
Module Texts
Bartol, C (1999): Criminal Behaviour: a psychosocial approach. Prentice-Hall
Howitt, D (2009): Forensic and Criminal Psychology (3rd Edn). Harlow, Pearson Education
Davies, G.M., Hollin, C.R. & Bull, R. (Eds) (2008). Forensic Psychology. Sussex: Wiley