I don’t read books

First published in 2012.

“I don’t read books,” a young Carroll colleague recently told me, and a second colleague nodded in agreement. “I just don’t have the time for pleasure reading or for reading outside my discipline if I am also to keep up with my research agenda and stay abreast of the psychological literature. When I read, I do it online.”

Perhaps this is yet another signal that I am becoming a stranger in a strange land. Walk into my office, and you’ll see books lining the walls, stacked on the floor, on my desk, and piled on the chairs around my desk. Novels, short stories, poetry, and nonfiction—paperback and hardback, pages stained with coffee, annotated, or dog-eared and occasionally, dog-drooled upon. Follow me home to my study, and you’ll find more of the same! Books and the many authors who write so much better than I and who think in such different ways than I have clearly shaped who I am and who I aspire to be. I am bookmarked!

I love to read! Thank you, first-grade teachers, past, present, and future, for engendering a love of reading in children. I especially enjoy reading books and articles outside the narrow confines of my academic specialization, by authors from different cultures. Though I own a Kindle, it lies in a drawer unplugged and gathering dust. Though I have on my computers applications that allow for reading ebooks, I find the act of reading on a computer an entirely different (and less pleasurable) experience than reading print on paper. Though I have tried listening to audiobooks, I am not transformed by them as I am when I read the presentation.

Two recent psychology-related books that I read this summer are Richard J. Davidson (with Sharon Begley)’s The Emotional Life of Your Brain and Cathy Davidson’s Now You See It: How the Brain Science of Attention Will Transform the Way We Live, Work, and Learn. Both are autobiographical, explaining the foundations of their research.

Richard Davidson (who was named by Time Magazine in 2006 as one of the 100 most influential people in the world) makes a compelling case for the neurological structure of six dimensions of emotional style:

  • resilience (how quickly one recovers from emotions)
  • outlook (how long one can sustain positive emotion)
  • social intuition
  • self-awareness
  • sensitivity to context
  • and attention (focus)

He suggests ways to measure and to change one’s emotional style.

Cathy Davidson (of whom I first became aware through her “This Is Your Brain on the Internet” course fame) offers a rambling, provocative, anecdotal, and inspirational book that asserts a mismatch between work and the ever-changing workplace and shares her evolving thoughts on 21st-century literacy. She is scheduled to give a presentation and lead a faculty workshop at Carroll on October 8, 2012.

Most of my summer reading was fiction, however. What suggestions do you have for me to read next?

Retooling

First Published on: Oct 31, 2011

Time to retool. I just installed a new iMac in my lab with a new color laser printer. How things have changed from my TRS-80 RadioShack computer and “dumb” terminal days!

Almost ready to migrate my personal MacBook Pro to Mac OS X Lion. So much to learn…

I am fortunate this year to have an unusually talented group of bright, young, fun, and eager-to-learn student assistants. Just had my office dual-operating-system Mac Laptop (OS X 10.6 and Windows 7) reinstalled with Carroll software. Have been playing with an iPad and a Kindle. Gearing up for teaching the Research Seminar next semester (hope I get a few students!), and most importantly, just sharpened a new box of pencils and added to them extended erasers! Some needed school supplies never change!

Time to revisit. I see that Jane Hart is about to announce the final polling results of her Top-Tools-for-Learning  List. Always worth revisiting, so I examined each of the 100 tools listed and will be directing my research assistants to a subset of them before I “cast my vote.” For me, the critical questions are:

  1. Will mastering this tool increase the likelihood that I will become a more effective teacher?
  2. Which of these tools will enhance my research and my research communication capabilities?
  3. Which of these tools do I want all my students to know how to use? (Which are best for freshmen versus seniors?)
  4. Which of these tools will be around in the next four years?
  5. Which of these tools best serves me in my nonacademic role as a partner at Schneider Consulting?
  6. Among subsets of tool types, which best serve my needs?
  7. How much learning time do I or my students need to invest to use these tools?
  8. Are these tools portable across the browsers I most frequently use?
  9. Are these tools portable across the hardware I most frequently use and am about to explore?
  10. How much of the attractiveness of these tools to me is due to their “wow factor” and the fun they engender?

Stay tuned.

Preparing for My 64th Semester of Teaching at Carroll

First  Published on: Jan 19, 2009 

It was good to be sitting at my desk in my office at school today. Spring semester classes don’t begin until Wednesday, and I had considerable uninterrupted time to clean the office, organize materials, discard last semester’s uneaten lunch, and think about my three courses. Precious moments of uninterrupted, focused reflection, planning, and action are rare for me once classes begin, because I choose to keep my door open to students and colleagues.
I’m teaching Introductory Psychology (after a one-semester hiatus) for probably close to the 100th time. I taught it as a graduate student at Ohio State, and I have taught here at Carroll on several summers and evenings in addition to almost every semester since February of 1978. Indeed, this coming semester, I shall yet again be teaching a daughter of one of my former students. In some ways, Introductory Psychology is the most challenging course for me to teach. Most students are not majors, and it is a challenge to simply and with integrity condense a discipline I have explored for almost forty years.
This semester, inspired by conversations with colleagues and students, I am going to incorporate several innovations.

  1. A section on cross-cultural psychology will feature social psychologist Richard Nisbett, who will speak on campus about the “Geography of the Mind” (see my earlier blog).
  2. Having students read and respond to some of my future (and older “Curious David”) blogs on psychological topics. I may create a special wiki for them.
  3. Involving students in some fashion with the research I shall be conducting with 12 seniors. I am toying with five research topics: the effects of color on behavior; revisiting the “Mozart effect”; revisiting “subliminal” persuasion; evaluation research (e.g., the efficacy of Rosetta Stone software); and a systematic evaluation of Web 2.0 learning tools. As the President of this institution is fond of saying, “Stay tuned.”

Carroll truly is being enriched more and more by the presence of international students. Today, while photocopying, I struck up a conversation with a student from Brazil. Last semester, I had the delightful experience of learning with and from a Vietnamese student. A graduate school classmate of mine has just become an editor of a British journal. A Norwegian friend who mentored me in 1974 has just published a book. My discipline is finally becoming more culturally aware, much less chauvinistic — see Arnett, J. J. (2008). The neglected 95%: Why American psychology needs to become less American. American Psychologist, 63, 602-614— and recognizing that the world is indeed flat.  How exciting; what fun!
There is much to be curious about. That is vital to keeping me playful, energized, and wanting to teach and to learn.

Thanks to my incipient readership. Based on the statistics I can monitor, I am already attracting a readership at a higher rate than I did while writing for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel last year. And this without Mom’s help!

     Keep those comments and feedback coming, either through posting or by sending them to my email address.