For current students…please consider participating in this
online survey.
Thanks.
Tom Mitchell, Ph.D.
Industrial & Organizational Psychologist
Director of Graduate Programs in Psychology
Division of Applied Behavioral Sciences
University of Baltimore
Academic Center Suite 209 D
1420 N. Charles Street
Baltimore, MD 21201
Phone: 410 837 5348
Fax: 410 837 4059
From: [log in to unmask]
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Marina Pearce
Sent: Thursday, September 16, 2010 2:04 PM
To: Thomas Mitchell
Subject: I/O Grad Student Interests Study
Dr. Mitchell,
We would greatly appreciate if you could read and forward the below e-mail to
your Industrial/Organizational program’s graduate students. We are seeking to
include all graduate students currently enrolled in I/O Psychology programs in
the U.S.
If you are not the current program director and feel uncomfortable deciding
whether to send this to your students, please forward this e-mail to the
current program director.
____________________________________________________________
Hello,
We are conducting a study to identify scientist-practitioner orientations among
graduate students in Industrial/Organizational Psychology. We invite you to
fill out our questionnaire, which should take about 20 minutes to complete.
In return for your participation, we are offering (1) chances to win one of
fifty Amazon.com gift certificates, and (2) the option of receiving a summary
of our final results.
To fill out our questionnaire, simply go to http://psychology.msu.edu/SPI
(username=iograd; password=hawthorne). After completing it, you will be
redirected to a second questionnaire where you will be asked only for your
e-mail address (so that we may contact you if you win a prize) and whether you
would like to receive a summary of our results.
We request that you participate only once and that you not share your survey
login information with others -- doing either would harm the integrity of our
data and decrease your chances of winning a prize. Please let us know if you
have any questions.
Thanks and best,
Dr. Frederick Leong, Jason Huang, and Marina Pearce (Michigan State University)