Monthly Archives: August 2015

First Day of School: the Liberal Arts

Liberal-Arts

Yesterday was the first day of classes at my University.  While we waited for the tech from IT to show up to figure out why the computer wouldn’t turn on (it was unplugged; I was embarrassed) I waxed on (and on) about why taking a course in the history of Psychology was worthwhile.  I might have gotten a little misty-eyed when I spoke about the importance of the ideas of dead white guys (and a few gals and even fewer people of color).  Why institutions of higher learning want to educate the whole person for his or her whole life.  Otherwise, I remarked, “you can just go to a technical school” and avoid all this general education/interdisciplinary/irrelevant-to-the-major nonsense we subject you to.

I also might have gone a bit overboard on why understanding the history of their field of study is essential.  I once remarked, to a colleague who asked why I thought  discussing the history of Psychology was important in an Introductory class, that “it is important for students to know that the questions that guide our research didn’t just fly out of our asses” (I really did say that, exactly as quoted).

People, all kinds of people, have been thinking about central questions related to the human condition, probably since people began thinking.  Institutes of higher learning HAVE A RESPONSIBILITY to make thinking and talking about these topics central to their mission.  It is all about the ideas, people, all about the ideas!

On the Needles

The tagline for this blog claims I will make “occasional forays into knitting”.  That might end up a dramatic underestimation…my identity as a knitter is as important to me as my identity as a social psychologist.  I chronicle all my knitting projects elsewhere (Ravelry: kme124) but sometimes I want to show off in more than one venue.  Today’s project was finished mere days before the recipient leaves for an extended trip to Southeast Asia…where she’ll no doubt be happy that she has a nice pair of wool socks!

Skipperdoodles

 

Although I knit many things, knitting socks is a favorite.  My muse, Janelle (TT 820), got me started and I couldn’t stop.  Socks are a fairly perfect project: small (so one can easily take a project to dentist appointments, the department of motor vehicles, FACULTY MEETINGS…)!  The next pair will be for my surrogate daughter, Stephie, using this lovely confection:

Supersocke

It is that time of year again

It happens to all of us in academia-land, I think.  As summer dwindles and (in my case) the peaches start to ripen I know that very soon my free time will be over.  School is about to start…but it starts for faculty a lot earlier than it does for students.  Courses must be planned or tweaked…the new textbook should be perused…and the closed-toed shoes must be dug out from under the bed.  Most of us DO work in the summer, some teaching summer classes, etc., but the work I am talking about happens in my pajamas or at my local coffee shop (rarely do I mix the two, by the way).

Today saw me perched at my local grocery store food court.  I like to set up my satellite office there because nobody ever talks to me.  I suspect the salad bar guy occasionally wonders who this weirdo is with her books and laptop but I don’t mind…at least he doesn’t talk to me.  I met up with a research collaborator (Caitlin Faas Bond) and commiserated about how little time we had yet to get the prep work done for classes.  I had created my History and Systems of Psychology syllabus earlier in the summer, but that still leaves Research Methods II and the Psychology of Religion and Spirituality to plan.  I am procrastinating doing either of them by creating this blog post, by the way.

But the syllabi won’t be getting done on their own so I will now flip a coin to see which to work on first…

Currently listening to…

I’m skipping an audiobook (Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel: REALLY GOOD!) with this post.  I’m currently listening to Religion for Atheists by Alain de Botton).  I first heard him on a podcast interview with Krista Tippett (On Being) and realized that this might be a great book for my Psychology of Religion and Spirituality class.  I continually struggle with atheist students not understanding why religious people are faithful and with religious students not understanding why atheists don’t recognize the benefits they enjoy in their faith.  I’m hoping this might help in that endeavor.

The other books I’m requiring are Karen Armstrong’s The Great Transformation: The Beginning of Our Religious Traditions and David Fontana’s Psychology, Religion, and Spirituality.

Karen Armstrong Religion for Atheists Fontana Religion