
| RESEARCH PARTICIPATION REQUIREMENT |
Students in undergraduate courses must complete
a research participation requirement in each of the first two of
these courses they take. The standard requirement is that they participate
in four, one-hour experimental sessions per course. Students must
register on-line at www.princeton.edu/per to fulfill the subject
participation requirement.
Students who do not wish to participate in experimental
sessions must complete an alternative requirement, such as writing
a critical analysis of a journal article selected by the faculty.
The articles can be found in the Psychology Department Library or
see RoseMarie Stevenson (Room 2-C-2) for a listing.
Students who do not complete the requirement
by the end of the semester deadline will fail the course. Instructions
for participating in research are distributed in each course at
the beginning of the term.
| ETHICAL GUIDELINES FOR
RESEARCH WITH HUMAN SUBJECTS |
All research involving human beings must be reviewed
and approved by the University's Institutional Review Panel for
Human Subjects (IRP). Researchers must complete and submit one original
and eighteen signed copies of either a Questionnaire A or Questionnaire
B directly to: Andrew Sylvester, Secretary, Institutional Review
Panel for Human Subjects, ORPA, New South Building. If the research
involves school children, you will need to submit a parent/guardian
consent form, as well as, a permission letter to parents.
All researchers whose work requires human subjects
must be certified through the National Institute of Health's training
website. All psychology students that are working with human subjects
MUST also complete the certification workshop that is provided by
the department. Please contact RoseMarie Stevenson, in Room 2-C-2,
for details on these certification requirements.
Questionnaires A and B and consent forms are in
the Coordinator's office, 2-C-2 Green Hall.
The Panel meets once each month during the
school year, and your completed questionnaire must reach ORPA twelve
days before the committee meets. The schedule of meetings and deadline
dates will be distributed to members of the Psychology Department,
as well as, Junior and Senior concentrators at the beginning of
the school year.
| JUNIOR AND SENIOR CONCENTRATORS |
A student's faculty adviser must review
and sign the completed questionnaire before it is submitted to the
IRP. All correspondence directed to subjects who will participate
in the research must also be countersigned by the faculty adviser.
Each subject must sign an informed consent
before involvement in any research. If a subject is under l8 years
old, a parent or guardian must sign for him, or her. In addition,
all subjects must be given an information sheet that states the
title of the research, and the name, address and phone number of
the investigator and the secretary of the Institutional Review Panel.
You may obtain the consent forms and information forms in Room 2-C-2,
Green Hall. After the study has been run, signed consents should
be sent to the Coordinator for safekeeping.
The maximum standard rate paid per subject
is $10.00 for one hour and $6.00 for a half- hour. Students that
participate as a psychology requirement are compensated by course
credit, and therefore, cannot be paid. Subjects in school settings
are not paid.
| SIGN FOR RESEARCH BULLETIN
BOARD |
When you are running an experiment in Green
Hall, you may post a sign-up sheet on the Research Bulletin Board
in the lobby. A faculty member must authorize any such research
by initialing sign-up sheets. These notices should contain a word
about the nature of the research, the time involved, the rate of
pay, and number, or location, of the room where the experiment is
to be conducted. It is helpful if you provide the Secretarial Center
and the Departmental Receptionist with this information as well.
To receive a cash advance for subject payments:
fill out request for subject money forms (see Carol Agans, Room
l-S-4C). An invoice will then be submitted (it takes approximately
l0 days to get a check). Each cash advance should be cleared up
before applying for another cash advance. Be sure to save all receipts
(signature of proof of payment) to present at one time for reimbursement
to Carol Agans.
Should you plan to conduct research in
a setting outside Green Hall (school, camp, etc.), you must contact
RoseMarie Stevenson, Room 2-C-2, as early in the semester as possible,
before you begin your research. It is her responsibility to make
arrangements for you. You will be asked to complete a short questionnaire
that will describe your specific needs, as well as, draft a letter
to parents/guardians of minors seeking parental consent. Your research
must have the approval of the IRP before any schools or outside
groups may be contacted. Prior to your IRP submission and prior
to conducting any research with human subjects, you must be certified.
Please see RoseMarie Stevenson regarding certification procedures.
You are expected to provide a copy of your thesis to the school
upon completion of your reserach. A letter outlining general results
of your research is also to be provided to the school by the end
of the school term, as well as, to the parents/guardians of the
children who participated in your study. In rare instances, a research
study may extend beyond the school year. When this occurs, make
certain that Mrs. Stevenson has the information before starting
negotiations with schools so that the schools are given a clear
commitment as to when staff and parents/guardians are to receive
results of the research.
| HUMAN SUBJECTS/ANIMAL
SUBJECTS |
If you plan to use human subjects for your
research, please contact RoseMarie Stevenson, 2-C-2 Green Hall,
extension 8-6267. If you plan to use animal subjects for your research,
you must contact the faculty member who is supervising your research
project in order to abide by both Princeton University and government
regulations.
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