Teresa A 06/07/2021

Nanette is so helpful. All the ladies at AHEC are the best!

Sarah M. 03/16/2020

The title of this course intrigued me and I was very excited to register for it as I have a Master's in Psychology and currently work as a Radiation Therapist. So, I was thrilled to see the two worlds combined. However, I was slightly disappointed in the execution. I wish I could answer the question "Are you satisfied with this course?" as somewhat. Because I wasn't totally dissatisfied, but I was definitely disappointed. I really felt like the majority of the time the speaker was just reading off the slides to us and didn't have any value added to contribute in addition to what we were reading for ourselves. The topic was definitely interesting, the added videos were relevant and very interesting and the imaging of the brains was intriguing. However, the course didn't go deeper into either the imaging aspect or the psychology part than just showing there's evidence they're connected. For credit for a professional in the imaging field I would have of expected more in depth on either the cross-sectional anatomy or breakdown of the images. The majority was comparisons side by side of normal brain vs criminal brain. The time that was spent at the end on Alzheimer's (which I feel could of easily been made into a separate training all together) in my opinion would of been better spent to get deeper into the imaging and biology of the brain and its connections to psychopathy. It also didn't feel as though the presenter had extensive knowledge on both subjects, and this may of been a result of just reading what was on each slide. Several of the charts and diagrams used were fuzzy and hard to read. It really has the makings of a great class and presentation, but with some flaws that left me frustrated and disappointed. I'm also not sure why Alzheimers was part of the this course because there is enough information out there on it that it could easily be its own course and it was obvious the instructor had more knowledge or at least scientific resources on this topic. But unfortunately still just read most of it instead of actively teaching or informing. A side note....the DSM IV was replaced in 2013 and I believe at least one disorder mentioned in the presentation was not in the DSM IV but is in the DSM V (the instructor uses a photo of the DSM IV cover when defining anti-social personality disorder in the beginning. This should probably be updated) DMDD appeared for the first time in the DSM V so the course should probably list the correct edition.

Joshua E. 03/16/2020

I learned a lot. Very interesting. Thank you for your research.

Cody W. 05/28/2019

Great topic and very informative. Thank you for making CE hours so enjoyable.

Emery W. 05/28/2019

After a week of classes, I've run out of positive adjectives to describe how good there courses were!

Showing 86 to 90 of 95 (19 Pages)