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Goldstein, Evan R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
In 1966 a group of friends gathered for a dinner party in Manhattan. As the evening was winding down, one of the guests, Lloyd N. Morrisett, a vice president at the Carnegie Corporation, turned to his host, a television executive named Joan Ganz Cooney, and asked a seemingly innocuous question: Can television educate young children? Unknown to…
Descriptors: Art Education, Childrens Television, Educational Television, Popular Culture
Clemens, David – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
As documented by multiple NEA studies ("Reading at Risk," 2004; "To Read or Not to Read," 2007), reading has become devalued in American life, on sale in the clearance bin along with notions of greatness, classic works and ideas, and Western civilization itself. Trying to teach fine literature, writes the author, has become the struggle of how to…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), Western Civilization, Popular Culture, Literary Criticism
Nelson, Michael – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Scholarly books with "identity" and "culture" in the title have loomed large on academic publishing lists for several years. Scholarly books with "Sinatra" in the title are a more recent phenomenon. Despite his six-decade career as the Voice (the 1940s), the Chairman of the Board (the 50s and 60s), and Ol' Blue Eyes (the 70s through his death, in…
Descriptors: Singing, Italian Americans, Popular Culture, Reputation
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Nobody shouts "It's alive!" in the novel that gave birth to Frankenstein's monster. "Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus," does not feature mad scientists messing around with beakers in laboratories, nor does it deliver any bug-eyed assistants named Igor. Hollywood has given people those stock images, but the story of the monster and his maker…
Descriptors: Novels, Intellectual History, Etiology, Authors
Fendrich, Laurie – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Recently the author has been including in her undergraduate seminars Jean-Jacques Rousseau's "Letter to d'Alembert on the Theatre" (1758), the most provocative essay on the arts ever written. It is about the unintended effects of theater--which, for Rousseau, stands in for all of the arts--on an audience. The essay is an impassioned rebuttal to…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Theaters, English Instruction, Literature
Young, Jeffrey R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article takes a look at the rising popularity of professors as the latest YouTube stars. The popularity of their appearances on YouTube and other video-sharing sites is making it possible for classrooms to be opened up and making teaching--which once took place behind closed doors--a more public art. Web video has generated a new form of…
Descriptors: Colleges, Foreign Countries, Peer Acceptance, Faculty
Harford, Tim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2006
There was a dearth of popular economics books in the early 1990s that showed a reader not only that economics meant something in everyday life, but that economists were people who understood what everyday life was. However, a decade later, books such as "Naked Economics: Undressing the Dismal Science", by Charles J. Wheelan, show that it is…
Descriptors: Economics, Books, Popular Culture
Read, Brock – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
This article reports on a monitoring project commenced by the campus-network officials at Illinois State University that shows that the campus network is a haven for illegal activity. In an effort to bridge the divide between the university and the entertainment industry, Illinois State designed an unorthodox research program to give a detailed…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Copyrights, Popular Culture, Student Surveys
Hoover, Eric – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
A gentleman does not steal horses, spit food across the table, or pee on peoples' shoes. By that definition, John "Bluto" Blutarsky is not a gentleman, but something more extraordinary. The fictional antihero of "National Lampoon's Animal House," Bluto is a slovenly symbol of irreverence, a bloated personification of the id. Bored by the past and…
Descriptors: Laws, Films, Popular Culture, Fraternities
Oppenheimer, Mark – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
For having achieved a mild cult status after doing the movie "Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle," lead actors John Cho and Kal Penn deserve their fame, their million-dollar paychecks, and their groupies. Do they deserve Ivy League teaching jobs? This spring Penn (whose real name is Kalpen Modi) taught a large lecture class, "Images of Asian…
Descriptors: Research Universities, Academic Achievement, Asian Americans, Selective Admission
Keller, Josh – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Most statistics courses emphasize the power of statistics. Michele DiPietro's course focuses on the failures. Gay and lesbian studies are certainly fertile ground for bad guesses and unreliable statistics. The most famous number, that 10 percent of the population is gay, was taken from a biased Kinsey sample of white men ages 16 to 55 in 1948, and…
Descriptors: Statistics, Sexual Orientation, Homosexuality, Meta Analysis
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2006
Amy Richlin, a professor of classics at the University of California at Los Angeles, has just translated "Poenulus," a comedy likely written between 224 B.C. and 184 B.C. by the Roman playwright Plautus. To make the comedy comprehensible for modern audiences, Richlin came up with with a bolder and deliberately controversial approach: Seek out…
Descriptors: Comedy, Popular Culture, Translation, Audiences
Ferguson, Christopher J. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
A perennial talking point of politicians and scientists, since the time of the Greeks, is to lament how American youth are sliding into moral decrepitude, lawlessness, and poor mental health. Indeed, to hear some observers talk, particularly in this election year, young people in the United States are being battered by a coarsened culture that…
Descriptors: Pregnancy, Sexuality, Youth, Violence
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article reports that Canadian medical students, inspired by an online community and an obscure heart condition, have ditched their books and transformed their class notes into a pulsating, hip-hop music video. "Diagnosis Wenckebach"--the name comes from a type of abnormal heart rhythm--was created as just one of many innovative…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Medical Schools, Web Based Instruction, Student Motivation
Collison, Michele N-K – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1990
Black college students are increasingly embracing the message of rap music and challenging the status quo. While not all students share the view, students advocating self-determination and emphasizing their African roots have become a vocal majority among Blacks on many campuses. (MSE)
Descriptors: Activism, Black Students, College Students, Ethnicity
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