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About the Teacher

NAME: Julie Damschen

SCHOOL: Helix Charter High School

CURRENT CLASSES: AP Psychology, Psychology 1/2C

PHONE & E-MAIL: (619) 644-1940 x334 and jdamsch@helixcharter.net


About the Teacher

I am a native San Diegan and absolutely love it!  I grew up in Lakeside and attended El Capitan High 
School (and I survived it without ever converting to country music).  I worked my way through college 
managing a pediatric neurosurgeon's office.  After I graduated from UC San Diego, I decided to 
backpack through Europe.  People had always told me that I should become a teacher, but I never 
thought there was enough money in it.  But living out of a backpack for a couple of months 
can really change your priorities!  So I got my teaching credential and my master's degree, and here I 
am at Helix.

Since coming here in 1997, I have been involved in several activities on campus.  I did Highlander 
Camp my first summer, was an Extended Learning (ExL) tutor while I completed my student 
teaching, been on several committees including Restructuring, Budget, and Department Chair (as an 
Alternative Ed. representative), Class of 2003 Advisor (with Ms. Beltran), Peer Mediation Advisor (with 
Ms. Vickery and Mr. Schultz), Humans For Humans (Amnesty International), Helix Animal Rescue 
Team (HART),  Invisible Children Club, Literacy and Technology Resource Mentor, Course Level Team 
Coordinator, ASB Advisor, and Charter Board Representative.

I have taught Writing Fundamentals, Math Fundamentals, Reading Fundamentals, P.E., Geography, 
Honors Geography, Life Management Skills, Psychology, AP Psychology and A.V.I.D.

In my free time I love going to the beach, traveling, movies, and amusing myself with useless trivia 
games.

Class Mission

The below statement was written by Alan Feldman, an AP Psychology teacher at Perth Amboy High 
School in New Jersey, but it so accurately articulates my own beliefs that I am stealing it...

"What do a schizophrenic, a split-brain patient, a preoperational child, a Freudian therapist, and a 
rat in a Skinner Box have in common? They are among the roles I assume, along with dozens of 
others, when I am teaching AP Psychology, the course I most love to teach. That's because it gives 
me an opportunity to discuss in depth topics that are intrinsically fascinating, relevant to students' 
lives, and have important personal and social consequences. 

"Many social problems are behaviorally based, including anger, crime, smoking, racism, and child 
abuse. An AP Psychology course can help students realize the positive outcomes of an authoritative 
parenting style, the effectiveness and humanity of positive reinforcement to modify behavior, the 
value of a clinical psychologist as compared to a friend, the effectiveness of reflective listening, and 
a greater capacity to resist implicit and explicit group pressure through understanding research on 
conformity and obedience. 

"An underlying theme of the course is the importance of understanding objective, empirical methods 
of collecting and interpreting data, including a basic knowledge of descriptive and inferential 
statistics. In addition, students must be able to understand and critique descriptive, predictive, and 
experimental research methods, and most, if not all, topics should be linked to the type of research 
methodology that supports or produces them. Students should be aware of the logically permissible 
appropriate inferences; conclusions, and generalizations that can be made based on the research 
method used or statistical analysis applied. It is important to encourage students to question and 
investigate the effect of the research methodology used in the information they acquire. 

"Students should be inspired by the instructor to make meaningful interconnections between 
disparate concepts. They should be asked to relate information to the major psychological themes, 
including nature/nurture, continuity/discontinuity, change/stability, idiographic/nomothetic, mind-
body interactions, and homeostatic (opposing process) regulation. Perspectives include 
psychoanalytic, behavioral, cognitive, humanistic, biological, and social-cultural. 

"Once, a bright middle-school student asked me if any scientists were alive! That remark has 
affected the way I teach, especially AP Psychology. I don't know of any field other than psychology 
with such potential to generate student interest and excitement about scientific research. With the 
introduction of each new concept, I make sure to mention the research of current psychologists and 
try to help students realize that, like other sciences, psychology is a vibrant, continually expanding 
body of knowledge in which new discoveries are made on a regular basis. "

If you think this sounds as exciting and interesting as I do, then you are in the right place!


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