Arnold L. Glass, Ph.D., is the former vice chair of undergraduate studies for the Department of Psychology. His research investigates how well people remember what they have seen and heard.
His studies include recent work developing instructional methods consistent with how the brain creates long-term memories.
He is the author of many publications and articles, including the textbook /Cognition/. He has been a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Oslo in Norway, and a visiting scientist at the Applied Psychology Unit of Cambridge University in England. He has also been the Executive Officer of the Eastern Psychological Association.
Frequently featured on radio and in the New York Daily News, Glass is also an expert on football and an avid Scarlet Knights football fan.
Professor Glass is an authority of the effects of new technologies, such as cell phones, on classroom behaviors and academic performance. He has been a guest on radio shows and on podcasts. His research on the effects of cell phones has been described in many online and print publications.