Myers has taken his best-selling text Social Psychology and completely re-written and abridged it into 31 self-contained modules on the key topics at the core of social psychology. Each module is a beautifully written 8-15 page essay that focuses the student on key research and how it relates to his or her life in both profound and simple ways. Destined to be a classic alternative to the big, hardcover, four-color text, Exploring Social Psychology is only 300 pages long, under 20.00 (suggested retail) and the most original conception of the field to be published in years. A great core text and centerpiece of the McGraw-Hill Series in Social Psychology to which one can add other series books and still keep the price of the course quite low.
David G. Myers is the John Dirk Werkman Professor of Psychology at Michigan's Hope College, where students have voted him "Outstanding Professor." Myers' love of teaching psychology is manifest in his writings for the lay public. His articles have appeared in two-dozen magazines and he has authored or co-authored ten books, including
The Pursuit of Happiness (Avon, 1993) and
The American Paradox (Yale University Press, 2000).
Also an award-winning researcher, Myers received the Gordon Allport Prize from Division 9 of the American Psychological Association for his work on group polarization. His scientific articles have appeared in more than two-dozen journals, including
Science, American Scientist, Psychological Science, and the
American Psychologist. He has served his discipline as consulting editor to the
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology and the
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
In his spare time he has chaired his city's Human Relations Commission, helped found a community action agency which assists impoverished families, and spoken to dozens of collegiate and religious groups. David and Carol Myers are parents of two sons and a daughter.