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Writing and Reading Across the Curriculum (Subscription), 13th Edition by Laurence Behrens, University of California, Santa Barbara Leonard J. Rosen, Bentley College ZIP OR PDF for sale 

***THIS IS NOT THE ACTUAL BOOK. YOU ARE BUYING the Test Bank in e-version of the following book***

Table of Contents

Part I: STRUCTURES AND STRATEGIES

 

1. Summary, Paraphrase, and Quotation

 

What Is a Summary?

 

Can a Summary Be Objective?

BOX: Where Do We Find Written Summaries?

Using the Summary

 

The Reading Process

BOX: Critical Reading for Summary

 

How to Write Summaries

BOX: Guidelines for Writing Summaries

 

Demonstration: Summary

The Baby in the Well: The Case Against Empathy—Paul Bloom

Read, Reread, Highlight

Divide into Stages of Thought

Write a Brief Summary of Each Stage of Thought

Write a Thesis: A Brief Summary of the Entire Passage

Write the First Draft of the Summary

Summary 1: Combine Thesis Sentence with Brief Section

Summaries

The Strategy of the Shorter Summary

Summary 2: Combine Thesis Sentence, Section Summaries,

and Carefully Chosen Details

The Strategy of the Longer Summary How Long Should a Summary Be?

EXERCISE 1.1: Individual and Collaborative Summary Practice

 

Summarizing Graphs, Charts, and Tables

Bar Graphs

EXERCISE 1.2: Summarizing Graphs

Line Graphs

EXERCISE 1.3: Summarizing Line Graphs

Pie Charts

EXERCISE 1.4: Summarizing Pie Charts

Other Charts: Bubble Maps, Pictograms, and Interactive Charts

Tables

EXERCISE 1.5: Summarizing Tables

 

Paraphrase

BOX: How to Write Paraphrases

EXERCISE 1.6: Paraphrasing

 

Quotations

Choosing Quotations

Quoting Memorable Language

BOX: When to Quote

Quoting Clear and Concise Language

Quoting Authoritative Language

Incorporating Quotations into Your Sentences

Quoting Only the Part of a Sentence or Paragraph That You Need

Incorporating the Quotation into the Flow of Your Own Sentence

Avoiding Freestanding Quotations

EXERCISE 1.7: Incorporating Quotations

Using Ellipses

Using Brackets to Add or Substitute Words

BOX: When to Summarize, Paraphrase, and Quote

BOX: Incorporating Quotations into Your Sentences

EXERCISE 1.8: Using Brackets

 

Avoiding Plagiarism

BOX: Rules for Avoiding Plagiarism

 

 

2. Critical Reading and Critique

 

Critical Reading

Question 1: To What Extent Does the Author Succeed in His or Her Purpose?

BOX: Where Do We Find Written Critiques?

Writing to Inform

Evaluating Informative Writing

Writing to Persuade

EXERCISE 2.1: Informative and Persuasive Thesis Statements

Evaluating Persuasive Writing

THE MOON WE LEFT BEHIND—Charles Krauthammer

EXERCISE 2.2: Critical Reading Practice

Persuasive Strategies

Logical Argumentation: Avoiding Logical Fallacies

BOX: Tone

EXERCISE 2.3: Understanding Logical Fallacies

Writing to Entertain

Question 2: To What Extent Do You Agree with the Author?

Identify Points of Agreement and Disagreement

EXERCISE 2.4: Exploring Your Viewpoints—in Three Paragraphs

Explore the Reasons for Agreement and Disagreement: Evaluate Assumptions

Inferring and Implying Assumptions

An Example of Hidden Assumptions from the World of Finance

 

Critique

How to Write Critiques

BOX: Guidelines for Writing Critiques

 

Demonstration: Critique

To What Extent Does the Author Succeed in His or Her Purpose?

To What Extent Do You Agree with the Author? Evaluate Assumptions

Model Critique: A Critique of Charles Krauthammer’s “The Moon We Left Behind”—Andrew Harlan

EXERCISE 2.5: Informal Critique of the Model Critique

BOX: Critical Reading for Critique

The Strategy of the Critique

 

 

3. Thesis, Introduction, Conclusion

 

Writing a Thesis

The Components of a Thesis

Making an Assertion

Starting with a Working Thesis

Using the Thesis to Plan a Structure

BOX: How Ambitious Should Your Thesis Be?

EXERCISE 3.1: Drafting Thesis Statements

 

Introductions

Quotation

Historical Review

Review of a Controversy

From the General to the Specific

Anecdote and Illustration: From the Specific to the General

Question

Statement of Thesis

EXERCISE 3.2: Drafting Introductions

 

Conclusions

Summary (Plus)

Statement of the Subject's Significance

Call for Further Research

Solution/Recommendation

Anecdote

Quotation

Question

Speculation

EXERCISE 3.3: Drafting Conclusions

 

4. Explanatory Synthesis

 

What Is a Synthesis?

Summary and Critique as a Basis for Synthesis

Inference as a Basis for Synthesis: Moving Beyond Summary and Critique

Purpose

Example: Same Sources, Different Uses

BOX: Where Do We Find Written Syntheses?

Using Your Sources

 

Types of Syntheses: Explanatory and Argument

What Are Genetically Modified (GM) Foods?

Genetically Modified Foods and Organisms—The United States Department of Energy

Why a GM Freeze?—The GM Freeze Campaign

 

How to Write Syntheses

BOX: Guidelines for Writing Syntheses

 

The Explanatory Synthesis

 

Demonstration: Explanatory Synthesis—Going Up? An Elevator Ride to Space

EXERCISE 4.1: Exploring the Topic

The History of the Space Elevator—P. K. Aravind

Applications of the Space Elevator—Bradley C. Edwards

Going Up—Brad Lemley

Consider Your Purpose

EXERCISE 4.2: Critical Reading for Synthesis

Formulate a Thesis

Decide How You Will Use Your Source Material

Develop an Organizational Plan

Summary Statements

Write the Topic Sentences

BOX: Organize a Synthesis by Idea, Not by Source

Write Your Synthesis

 

Explanatory Synthesis: First Draft

Revise Your Synthesis: Global, Local, and Surface Revisions

Revising the First Draft: Highlights

Global

Local

Surface

EXERCISE 4.3: Revising the Explanatory Synthesis

Model Explanatory Synthesis: Going Up? An Elevator Ride to Space—Sheldon Kearney

BOX: Critical Reading for Synthesis 120

 

 

5. Argument Synthesis

 

What Is an Argument Synthesis?

The Elements of Argument: Claim, Support, and Assumption

Claim

Support

Assumption

EXERCISE 5.1: Practicing Claim, Support, and Assumption

The Three Appeals of Argument: Logos, Ethos, Pathos

Logos

EXERCISE 5.2: Using Deductive and Inductive Logic

Ethos

EXERCISE 5.3: Using Ethos

Pathos

EXERCISE 5.4: Using Pathos

The Limits of Argument

Fruitful Topics for Argument

 

Demonstration: Developing an Argument Synthesis—Responding to Bullies

BULLYING STATISTICS—Pacer.org

THE 2011 NATIONAL SCHOOL CLIMATE SURVERY: THE EXPERIENCES OF LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL AND TRANSGENDER YOUTH IN OUR NATION’S SCHOOLS—Joseph Kosciw, Emily Greytak, Mark Bartkiewicz et al.

OLWEUS Bullying Prevention Program: Scope and Sequence

White House Report/Bullying—And the Power of Peers—Philip Rodkin

EXERCISE 5.5: Critical Reading for Synthesis

 

The Argument Synthesis

Consider Your Purpose

Making a Claim: Formulate a Thesis

Decide How You Will Use Your Source Material

Develop an Organizational Plan

Formulate an Argument Strategy

Draft and Revise Your Synthesis

Model Argument Synthesis: Responding to Bullies—Peter Simmons

The Strategy of the Argument Synthesis

 

Developing and Organizing the Support for Your Arguments

Summarize, Paraphrase, and Quote Supporting Evidence

Provide Various Types of Evidence and Motivational Appeals

Use Climactic Order

Use Logical or Conventional Order

Present and Respond to Counterarguments

Use Concession

BOX: Developing and Organizing Support for Your Arguments

Avoid Common Fallacies in Developing and Using Support

 

The Comparison-and-Contrast Synthesis

Organizing Comparison-and-Contrast Syntheses

Organizing by Source or Subject

Organizing by Criteria

EXERCISE 5.6: Comparing and Contrasting

A Case for Comparison-and-Contrast: World War I and World War II

Comparison-and-Contrast Organized by Criteria

Model Exam Response

The Strategy of the Exam Response

 

Summary of Synthesis Chapters

 

 

6. Analysis

 

What Is an Analysis?

BOX: Where Do We Find Written Analyses?

 

How to Write Analyses

THE PLUG-IN DRUG—Marie Winn

EXERCISE 6.1: Reading Critically: Winn

Locate and Apply an Analytic Tool

Locate an Analytic Tool

Apply the Analytic Tool

Analysis Across the Curriculum

BOX: Guidelines for Writing Analyses

Formulate a Thesis

Develop an Organizational Plan

Turning Key Elements of a Principle or a Definition into Questions

Developing the Paragraph-by-Paragraph Logic of Your Paper

Draft and Revise Your Analysis

Write an Analysis, Not a Summary

Make Your Analysis Systematic

Answer the “So What?” Question

Attribute Sources Appropriately

BOX: Critical Reading for Analysis

When Your Perspective Guides the Analysis

 

Demonstration: Analysis

Model Analysis: The Case of the Missing Kidney: An Analysis of Rumor—Linda Shanker

EXERCISE 6.2: Informal Analysis of the Model Analysis

The Strategy of the Analysis

 

 

7. Locating, Mining, and Citing Sources

 

Source-Based Papers

BOX: Where Do We Find Written Research?

BOX: Writing the Research Paper

The Research Question

BOX: Narrowing the Topic via Research

EXERCISE 7.1: Constructing Research Questions

 

LOCATING SOURCES         

BOX: Types of Research Data

 

Preliminary Research

Consulting Knowledgeable People

Familiarizing Yourself with Your Library’s Resources

Locating Preliminary Sources

Encyclopedias

BOX: Wikipedia: Let the Buyer Beware

EXERCISE 7.2: Exploring Specialized Encyclopedias

Biographical Sources

Almanacs and Yearbooks

Literature Guides and Handbooks

Overviews and Bibliographies

Subject-Heading Guides

 

Focused Research

Databases

Smartphones and Database Searching

Discovery Services

Web Searches

BOX: Constructing an Effective Database Search Query

Searching Databases Effectively

BOX: Using Keywords and Boolean Logic to Refine Online Searches

Evaluating Web Sources

Other Pitfalls of Web Sites

EXERCISE 7.3: Exploring Online Sources

EXERCISE 7.4: Practice Evaluating Web Sources

Periodicals: General

Magazines

Newspapers

Periodicals: Specialized

EXERCISE 7.5: Exploring Specialized Periodicals

Books

Book Reviews

Government Publications and Other Statistical Sources

Interviews and Surveys

BOX: Guidelines for Conducting Interviews

BOX: Guidelines for Conducting Surveys and Designing Questionnaires

 

MINING SOURCES

BOX: Critical Reading for Research

 

The Working Bibliography

Note-Taking

Getting the Most from Your Reading

BOX: Guidelines for Evaluating Sources

 

Arranging Your Notes: The Outline

 

Research and Plagiarism

Time Management and Plagiarism

Confidence and Plagiarism

Note-Taking and Plagiarism

Digital Life and Plagiarism

 

Determining Common Knowledge

A Guideline for Determining Common Knowledge

 

Plagiarism, the Internet, and Fair Use

Internet Paper Mills

BOX: Fair Use and Digital Media

 

CITING SOURCES

BOX: Types of Citations

 

APA Documentation Basics

APA In-Text Citations in Brief

APA References List in Brief

 

MLA Documentation Basics

MLA In-Text Citations in Brief

MLA Works Cited List in Brief

 

 

Part II: BRIEF TAKES

 

MUSIC

 

 

8. “Stormy Weather” and the Art of the Musical Cover 

Whose version of “Please Don’t Stop the Music” do you prefer?  Rihanna’s or Jamie Cullum’s?  Such questions are at the heart of this chapter on music—specifically, the art of the musical “cover,” in which a musician or band puts a unique spin on a previously recorded song. Because music isn’t a verbal art form, writing about it might seem challenging—but we offer a model example of how to go about it. We also provide a useful glossary of key musical terms, both in print and as a series of online videos.  A review of a Paul McCartney album of cover songs makes some provocative claims about what makes for a successful cover and why so many cover albums disappoint. We conclude with Rolling Stone’s list of “greatest covers” for you to explore and debate.

 

A CLOUDFUL OF “STORMY WEATHER”— Harold Arlen and Ted Koehler   

HOW TO TALK—AND WRITE—ABOUT POPULAR MUSIC—Gregory Blair   

COMPARING AND CONTRASTING THREE COVERS OF “STORMY WEATHER”—GregBlair

WHY DO SOME COVERS DISAPPOINT?—Jeff Turrentine

A HEARTFUL OF “HALLELUJAH”—Leonard Cohen

”THE GREATEST COVERS OF ALL TIME—Rolling Stone magazine and other listings

Musical Cover Chapter Final Assignment

 

 

ETHICS

 

9. Ethical Dilemmas in Everyday Life 

Would you steal to save a life?  Sacrifice one life to save five?  In this chapter we provide a variety of sources on the ways that “thought experiments” in ethics—scenarios that ask you to decide on courses of right action (and to justify your decisions)—can serve as a guide for facing everyday ethical dilemmas. When there is no clear right and wrong choice, how do you decide? To what principles can you turn for guidance? Your task in the chapter will be to wrestle with ethical dilemmas and to argue for a clear course of action based on principles you make plain to your readers.

 

Read; Prepare to Write

BOX: Group Assignment #1: Make a Topic List

BOX: Group Assignment #2: Create a Topic Web

BOX: Group Assignment #3: Decide for Yourself

 

The Readings and Videos

WHAT IF . . . —Daniel Sokol

BOX: Video Link: The Trolley Car

THE CASE OF THE COLLAPSED MINE—Richard T. De George

A FRAMEWORK FOR THINKING ETHICALLY—Manual Velasquez, et al.

MORAL INQUIRY—Ronald F. White

BOX: Video Link: Grey’s Anatomy (a medical dilemma)

HEINZ’S DILEMMA: KOHLBERG’S SIX STATES OF MORAL DEVELOPMENT—William Crain

BOX: Video Link: The Heinz Dilemma

 

A Casebook of Ethical Dilemmas

THE LIFEFBOAT—Rosetta Lee

LIFEBOAT ETHICS: THE CASE AGAINST HELPING THE POOR—Garrett Hardin

SHOULD I PROTECT A PATIENT AT THE EXPENSE OF AN INNOCENT STRANGER?—Chuck Klosterman

NO EDIT—Randy Cohen

THE TORTURED CHILD—Kelley L. Ross

THE ONES WHO WALK AWAY FROM OMELAS—Ursula Le Guin

BOX: Video Link: The Drowning Child by Peter Singer

A CALLOUS PASSERBY

 

The Assignments

Summary   Ï  Alternate Summary Assignment   Ï   Critique

Ï   Explanatory Synthesis     Ï   Analysis

Ï   Alternate Analysis Assignment   Ï   Argument

Ï   Alternate Argument Assignment #1

Ï   Alternate Argument Assignment #2

 

 

SOCIOLOGY

 

10. The Roar of the Tiger Mom  

“Here are some things my daughters, Sophia and Louisa, were never allowed to do,” announces Yale law school professor Amy Chua in "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother.” Among her list of prohibitions: having a playdate, watching TV, playing computer games, and getting any grade less than A. Chua’s writing provoked a deluge of responses from readers and professional commentators, some outraged, some cheering her on. Here is a sampling of some of those responses, part of what became a national debate over the best way to raise children to be-come successful adults.

 

Read; Prepare to Write   

BOX: Group Assignment #1: Make a Topic List   

BOX: Group Assignment #2: Create a Topic Web   

 

THE READINGS

Adapted from 'BATTLE HYMN OF THE TIGER MOTHER"—Amy Chua   

MOTHER INFERIOR?—Hanna Rosin

   

AMY CHUA IS A WIMP—David Brooks   

 

TIGER MOTHER STIRS REFLECTIONS ON PARENTHOOD—Tina Griego

 

TIGER MOM VS. TIGER MAILROOM—Patrick Goldstein 

AMERICA’S TOP PARENT—Elizabeth Kolbert   

 

TIGER MOMS DON’T RAISE SUPERIOR KIDS, SAYS NEW STUDY—Susan Adams

   

THE ASSIGNMENTS

Summary    Ï   Critique Ï    Explanatory Synthesis   

Ï      Analysis         Ï    Argument   

 

 

Part III: AN ANTHOLOGY OF READINGS  

 

LITERATURE AND FILM

 

11. First Impressions: The Art and Craft of Storytelling

 

The Art and Craft of Starting Your Story  

THE HOOK—K.M. Weiland   

“Readers are like smart fish,” suggests novelist K.M. Weiland, “They aren’t about to surrender themselves to the lure of your story unless you’ve presented them with an irresistible hook.”

 

STARTING YOUR STORY— Michael Kardos   

Novelist and short story writer Michael Kardos discusses the five narrative tasks the beginning of a story must accomplish.  Among the most crucial: “Give us a reason to keep reading.”

 

THE MAGIC SHOW—Tim O’Brien  

The author of the classic Vietnam novel The Things They Carried  explains how a storyteller is like a magician and how mystery is central to both plot and character.

 

Chapter Ones: The Novels

 

EMMA—Jane Austen

Austin’s fourth published novel chronicles the intrusive matchmaking of a privileged young woman, Emma Woodhouse, in 19th-century England.

 

WUTHERING HEIGHTS—Emily Brontë

Set on the English moors, this novel explores love and revenge and madness through the love story of Catherine Earnshaw and Mr. Heathcliff.

 

JANE EYRE—Charlotte Brontë

This coming-of-age novel chronicles the life of its title character from childhood to marriage.

 

GREAT EXPECTATIONS—Charles Dickens

Often considered Dickens’s finest novel, this is the coming-of-age story of an English orphan named Pip.

 

THE SIGN OF THE FOUR—Arthur Conan Doyle

This is Doyle’s second novel starring Sherlock Holmes, the world’s greatest—and only—“consulting detec-tive.”

 

THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE—Stephen Crane

Set in Virginia in 1863, Crane’s second novel depicts a young man, Henry Fleming, who is fighting for the Un-ion army during the American Civil War.

 

DRACULA—Bram Stoker

This is the classic vampire novel to which all subsequent vampire novels (and shows, and movies) are indebted.

 

Scene Ones: The Films

 

JANE EYRE—directed by Robert Stevenson 

This is only one—but an influential one—of numerous film versions of Bronte’s romantic novel.

 

GREAT EXPECTATIONS--directed by David Lean 

Lean’s version of the terrifying encounter on an English marsh between Dickens’s young Pip and the escaped convict has never been surpassed.

 

EMMA—directed by Robert McGrath, and CLUELESS—directed by Amy Heckerling 

Here are two versions of Austen’s classic novel—the first a period piece, like Austen’s novel, set in county Sur-rey, England, the second set in Beverly Hills.

 

DRACULA—directed by Tod Browning and BRAM STOKER’S DRACULA--directed by Francis Ford Coppola 

Here are two film versions of Bram Stoker’s classic vampire story, created more than sixty years apart by di-rectors with very different artistic visions.

 

THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE—directed by John Huston 

Crane’s novel of a Civil War soldier wondering how he will act in battle is faithfully filmed—and then heavily edited by the studio bosses.

 

CITIZEN KANE—directed by Orson Welles 

This is the work most frequently cited as the greatest film of all time. Whether or not you agree, the opening scene of a newspaper magnate’s final moments make for compelling viewing.

 

BRIEF ENCOUNTER—directed by David Lean 

This is one of the greatest romantic dramas ever filmed—in a typically restrained British fashion.

 

SHANE—directed by George Stevens

In many ways, this is the archetypal western: set against magnificent Wyoming scenery, the film depicts an epic battle between a reluctant gunfighter and a rancher trying to drive homesteaders off their land.

 

THE GODFATHER, PART ONE—directed by Francis Ford Coppola

The greatest gangster film ever made is also a family drama—which begins at a wedding celebration.

 

SLEEPLESS IN SEATTLE—directed by Nora Ephron

In the tradition of classic romantic dramas, Ephron focuses on two people thousands of miles apart gravitating (haltingly) toward each other.

 

DO THE RIGHT THING—directed by Spike Lee. 

A simmering racial conflict on the hottest day of the year in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn is the focus of Spike Lee’s controversial film.

 

THE DEVIL IN A BLUE DRESS—directed by Carl Franklin 

The classic private detective formula is re-imagined along racial lines in Carl Franklin’s story of an unemployed African-American World War II veteran tasked to find the missing fiancé of a Los Angeles mayoral candidate.

 

CHICAGO—directed by Rob Marshall

Kander and Ebb’s scintillating musical about two female murderers begins with two knockout songs set partial-ly in the characters’ heads.

 

THE HURT LOCKER—directed by Kathryn Bigelow 

This tense film chronicles the daily life-and-death struggles of a bomb disposal unit during the Iraq War.

 

GRAVITY—directed by Alfonse Cuarón

This visually stunning film about an astronaut trying to return to earth after a catastrophic accident kept audiences on the edge of their seats.

 

12 YEARS A SLAVE—directed by Steve McQueen 

A brutally intense drama about a free black man sold into slavery is unforgettably depicted in McQueen’s film, which won the Academy Award for Best picture of 2013. 

 

·       Synthesis Activities

 

 

ECONOMICS

 

12. The Changing Landscape of Work in the Twenty-First Century  

 

The Puzzling U.S. Labor Market

   

A POST-COLLEGE FLOW CHART OF MISERY AND PAIN—Jenna Brager

A graphic artist offers a sardonic view of the job prospects for those holding a humanities degree.

JOB OUTLOOK FOR 2014 COLLEGE GRADS PUZZLING—Hadley Malcolm

A reporter for USA Today investigates job prospects for recent grads and concludes that for many “young  Americans . . . the recession never ended.”

 

WHY FOCUSING TOO NARROWLY IN COLLEGE COULD BACKFIRE--Peter Cappelli

A business professor acknowledges that in a tough job market there’s a strong temptation to acquire practical, immediately employable skills; but he questions the wisdom of turning the college years into narrowly focused vocational training.

 

WILL YOUR JOB BE EXPORTED?—Alan S. Blinder

An economist argues that the quality and security of future jobs in America’s services sector will be determined by how “offshorable” those jobs are.  Even jobs requiring a college degree are at risk. 

 

THEY’RE WATCHING YOU AT WORK: THE JOB INTERVIEW—Don Peck

You've landed that coveted job interview. During your face to face with the recruiter, you’re asked to play a video game while a computer monitors your every keystroke, assessing your potential as a prospective employee. Sound appealing?

 

Data on the U.S. Labor Market: Charts, Graphs, Tables

Multiple charts, graphs, and tables provide snapshots of current conditions in the job market. You’ll learn how graduates in different majors are faring in their search for jobs—and what they earnwhen hired. The data is culled from several authoritative sources: Pew Research, Georgetown Public Policy Institute, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

 

THE RISING COST OF NOT GOING TO COLLEGE—Pew Research

 

UNEMPLOYMENT AND EARNINGS FOR COLLEGE MAJORS—Georgetown Public Policy Institute/ Center for Education and the Workforce

 

EARNINGS AND UNEMPLOYMENT RATES BY EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT—Bureau of Labor Statistics

 

OCCUPATION FINDER—Bureau of Labor Statistics

 

 

 

 

Debate: Should You Do What You Love?

 

DO WHAT YOU LOVE—Steve Jobs

In this famous commencement address at Stanford University in 2005, a titan of the computer industry advises graduating seniors to follow their passion in the search for work. His advice provokes a furious debate.

 

DO WHAT YOU LOVE?  #@&** THAT!—Jeff Hayden

This columnist believes that “[t]elling someone to follow their passion . . . has probably resulted in more failed businesses than all the recessions combined.”

DEAR GRADS: DON’T DO WHAT YOU LOVE—Carl McCoy

Perhaps more young people would be happier in their jobs, according to this writer and musician, if “love [was] a consequence of meaningful work instead of . . . the motivation for it.”

 

IN THE NAME OF LOVE—Miya Tokumitsu

An art historian brings a socialist critique to the “do what you love” debate, arguing that people who work for love of the job often achieve their goals by employing others who come to hate their jobs.

 

Synthesis Activities   •  Research Activities   

 

 

SOCIOLOGY

 

13. Have You Heard This? The Latest on Rumor  

 

THE GOSSIPS—Norman Rockwell   

A famous Saturday Evening Post cover tracks a fast-moving rumor as it wends its way to, from, and around the local townsfolk, who react with amusement, surprise, and dismay.

 

FRANKENCHICKEN—Snopes.com   

Would you like fries with your genetically engineered chicken? How one fast food chain lost control of its secret recipe.

 

TRUTH IS IN THE EAR OF THE BEHOLDER—Gregory Rodriguez   

Won’t the truth make us free? No, reports a Los Angeles Times columnist: “we tend to reject theories and rumors—and facts and truths—that challenge our worldview and embrace those that affirm it.”

 

ANATOMY OF A RUMOR: IT FLIES ON FEAR—DANIEL GOLEMAN

“Rumors are a kind of opportunistic information virus, thriving because of their ability to create the very anxieties that make them spread,” notes psychologist Daniel Goleman.  This introduction to the world of rumor explains what con-temporary social scientists are doing to understand—and prevail against—a timeless and universal human phenomenon.

 

FIGHTING THAT OLD DEVIL RUMOR—Sandra Salmans   

How Procter & Gamble fought a rumor that would not die, about the Satanic significance of its corporate logo.

 

A PSYCHOLOGY OF RUMOR—Robert H. Knapp   

In this groundbreaking analysis, conceived during a time when wartime rumors were everywhere, a psychologist classifies the main types of rumors and explains what qualities make them so effective.

 

“PAUL IS DEAD!” (SAID FRED)—Alan Glenn   

Look closely at that album cover showing the four Beatles crossing Abbey Road. Why is Paul not wearing shoes? Could that clue be evidence that . . .  he’s really crossed over?

 

THE RUNAWAY GRANDMOTHER—Jan Harold Brunvand

Car with dead granny on roof stolen—News at 11!

 

HOW AND WHY RUMORS WORK—AND HOW TO STOP THEM—Nicholas DiFonzo   

A psychology professor explains how rumors help people who are “trying to figure out or make sense of an unclear or ambiguous situation.”

HOW TO FIGHT A RUMOR—Jesse Singal

Rumors are more than just “idle and malicious gossip.” Throughout history they have served important social functions. To fight rumors, particularly political rumors, we must study these functions.

 

THE RUMOR—John Updike   

A suburban wife tells her husband she’s heard a rumor that he’s gay. He laughs it off, but then, like a worm, the rumor burrows deep, with surprising results.

 

Synthesis Activities   •  Research Activities   

 

 

PHILOSOPHY

 

14. Happiness and its Discontents 

 

The Difficulty of Defining Happiness

HAPPINESS—Jane Kenyon   

A former poet laureate of New Hampshire compares happiness to an unknown uncle who appears at your door to wake you from a midafternoon sleep “during the unmerciful / hours of your despair.”

 

PIG HAPPINESS?—Lynne McFall   

John Stuart Mill once wrote that “[i]t is better to be a human being dissatisfied than a pig satisfied; better to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool satisfied.” Philosopher Lynn McFall riffs on this pronouncement with a playful—yet serious—run of questions.

 

IN PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS—Mark Kingwell   

For thousands of years philosophers, religious leaders, and poets have attempted to define happiness, yet no one has come up with a universally accepted definition. Is the effort futile? A contemporary philosopher doesn’t think so.

 

THE DALAI LAMA’S SKI TRIP: WHAT I LEARNED IN THE SLUSH WITH HIS HOLINESS—Douglas Preston

A writer making a “shabby” living plays host to a revered religious leader—and learns the meaning of life.

 

Positive Psychology: The Science of Happiness

A BALANCED PSYCHOLOGY AND A FULL LIFE—Martin E. P. Seligman, Acacia C. Parks, and Tracy Steen   

A founder of positive psychology explains key principles of the young science and claims that “three routes to happi-ness (pleasure, gratification, and meaning)” can be taught and nurtured.

 

FINDING FLOW—Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi   

Another founder of positive psychology defines a key component of happiness as “flow”—the state of being so im-mersed in an activity that all awareness of time and effort dissolves. Athletes call it “being in the zone.”

 

YES, MONEY CAN MAKE YOU HAPPY—Cass R. Sunstein    

Conventional wisdom tells us that money can’t buy happiness. Researchers think that it can—up to a point.

 

Critiques of Positive Psychology

HAPPINESS: ENOUGH ALREADY—Sharon Begley   

“On a scale from 1 to 10, where 10 is extremely happy, 8s were more successful than 9s and 10s, getting more education and earning more.” Might there be a downside to being too happy?

 

HAPPY LIKE GOD—Simon Critchley   

“Happiness is not quantitative . . . and it is not the object of any science, old or new. It cannot be gleaned from empirical surveys or programmed into individuals through . . . behavioral therapy and anti-depressants.”

 

HIGH PERFORMANCE HAPPY—Cliff Oxford

An entrepreneur rejects the application of happiness studies to business—labeling Human Resources personnel “happy-employee propagandists.”    

 

WHAT SUFFERING DOES—David Brooks

Happiness is but one part of the human drama; suffering is another.  In this essay, Brooks reflects on what we learn, and how we change, from suffering. 

 

Synthesis Activities  •  Research Activities   

 

 

PSYCHOLOGY

 

15. Obedience to Authority    

 

DISOBEDIENCE AS A PSYCHOLOGICAL AND MORAL PROBLEM—Erich Fromm   

“If mankind commits suicide,” argues this psychologist and philosopher, “it will be because people will obey those who command them to push the deadly buttons; because they will obey the archaic passions of fear, hate, and greed; because they will obey obsolete clichés of State sovereignty and national honor.”

 

THE POWER OF SITUATIONS—Lee Ross and Richard E. Nisbett   

Think you can predict whether or not a student walking across campus will stop to help a man slumped in a doorway? Don’t bet on it.

 

THE MILGRAM EXPERIMENT—Saul McLeod   

A psychologist devises an experiment to test the extent to which people will obey immoral orders. His startling conclusion: “ordinary people  . . . without any particular hostility on their part, can become agents in a terrible destructive process.”

 

THE FOLLOWER PROBLEM—David Brooks   

It’s sometimes difficult for Americans to square our belief that all people are created equal with the reality that a functioning society requires some people to lead and others to follow. A prominent social commentator explains that good leaders require people who “recognize just authority, admire it, [are] grateful for it and emulate it.”

 

GROUP MINDS—Doris Lessing   

 The flattering picture we paint of ourselves as individuals leaves most of us “helpless against all kinds of pressures…to conform.”

OPINIONS AND SOCIAL PRESSURE—Solomon E. Asch   

How powerful is group pressure upon the individual? A landmark experiment demonstrates that most people will deny the evidence of their own eyesight sooner than risk appearing out of step with the majority.

 

PRISONER AND GUARD: THE STANFORD EXPERIMENT   

You will be directed to a dramatic online video documenting a now-famous experiment in which college-age men take on the roles of guard and prisoner—with surprising (and sometimes chilling) results.

 

Synthesis Activities  •  Research Activities   

 

Credits 

Index 

Checklists for Writing Summaries, Critiques, Syntheses, Analyses

Manual solution Writing and Reading Across the Curriculum (Subscription), 13th Edition for sale , Writing and Reading Across the Curriculum (Subscription), 13th Edition for sale , Writing and Reading Across the Curriculum (Subscription), 13th Edition pdf for sale , Laurence Behrens, University of California, Santa Barbara Leonard J. Rosen, Bentley College

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