The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, June 14, 1983 - Page 7 PROFESSOR CHALLENGES 'U' GRADING TRADITION Psyching students to learn By ROB FRANK If Jim McConnell had his way, many University professors would be packing their bags. The 58-year-old psychology professor born in Okmulgee, Okla. contends that traditional grading policies prevent students from learning and professors who refuse to abandon their old ways PROFILE shouldn't be teaching at the University. TEACHING has become a power trip for most faculty members, said Mc- Connell, who came to the University in 1946. They have lost sight of teaching students to learn by focusing too much on grades, he said. "Teaching is a power trip. To teach well you have to give up power. If I teach organic (chemistry) I can keep you out of medical school," McConnell said. "Any time I'm teaching a course I have a commodity called grades which I artificially cause a scarcity of. So, there are only a certain number of 'A's. In that way, I can force you to do things my way." MCCONNELL uses an unconven- tional grading policy which has made his introductory psychology course one of the most popular on campus. Studen- I assume that it's my job to get students to learn... If they don't . . . then I'm in trouble, and I should be fired." -Prof. Jim McConnell ts in his class receive either an "A" or an incomplete which McConnell said encourages students to learn, not com- pete for high marks. "I assume that it's my job to get students to learn. I have to do whatever has to be done to achieve that goal. If they don't ... then I'm in trouble, and, I should be fired," McConnell said. "Most teachers just won't accept' this," he added. MCCONNELL has been a pioneer in the study of psychology breaking tradition few would dare to question. Dissatisfied with basic Freudian and behavior theories, McConnell adopted his own "holistic" approach to psychology a mixture of theories in ad- dition to McConnell's own work. McConnell earned a bachelors degree in psychology from Louisiana State University and a doctorate from the University of Texas. Ike has done ex- tensive research on the hiochemistry of memory, and on autistic children, which has brought critical reviews from the scientific community. McConnell's colleagues dissaprove of his satiric style and unconventional research techniques. But his offbeat teaching style attracts flocks of students to his course which is consistently filled early during registration. AMONG THE unique things McCon- nell does is host a pizza party with an open bar for students following the first exam in his Psych 192 class. Unlike most professors who schedule weekly office hours, McConnell instead invites students to go out for coffee once a week - and he picks up the tab. And students in McConnell's Psych 192 class don't pay for the text book, which he wrote. Students borrow copies for the semester and may purchase the book at the end of the term. BUT HIS textbook, one of the most popular in the nation, sells more than 100,000 copies a year. McConnell said he is very satisfied with the sales. "Let me put it this way," he said, "it first came out in 1974 and if you were to measure it the same way they do the New York Times bestsellers, the book would have been (on the list), almost every week since then." He is currently working on a second book on educational psychology which publishers say should also be a success. MEANWHILE, McConnell is content living in his large house between Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti which sits near the Huron River. Complete with almost every convenience imaginable, Mc- Connell is a video game addict and has more than 50 cartridges which plug into the giant TV screen in his living room. Among his other conveniencies are a gold Mercedes with a license plate that reads "BEHAVE", equipped with a stereo that would put any home system to shame. Even McConnell's bathrooms are filled with the sound of classical music. McConnell has had a passion for classical music since the early '40s. He rarely listens to modern music because it is "too left hemisphere," he said. "IT IS TOO intellectual, they've destroyed rhythm, they've destroyed patterns, they've destroyed melody," he said. A self-proclaimed "serious" collec- tor, McConnell plans a move to a larger house in the fall partially to store the tape collection which now fills two bedrooms and most of his living room. Despite his fascination with the newest gadgets, McConnell's beliefs about education are very down to earth. "Teachers should try to put themselves out of business, when you finish mine or any course, you shouldn't need the teacher anvmnr. 11 Psychology professor Jim McConnell relaxes after an afternoon of work on his newest book which studies educational psychology.