AWARD NOMINATION CALL FOR ANECDOTES:
We mentioned earlier this month that sociologists Michael Kimmel and Abby Kinchy are nominating us for the American Sociological Association’s Distinguished Contributions to Teaching Award. The award is given to sociologists who have made “a significant impact on the manner in which sociology is taught at a regional, state, national, or international level.” Kimmel and Kinchy are seeking short anecdotes or testimonials from sociologists who have found Sociological Images to be useful in the classroom. We are so pleased at the response so far, and want to make one final, humble solicitation for such anecdotes. They can be emailed to Abby Kinchy (kincha@rpi.edu) or added right here in the comments.
Thank you all again for making our blog so very rewarding for us both.
LOTS OF FUN NEWS:
The next essay in our ongoing feature in Contexts magazine, Skull Face and the Self-Fulfilling Stereotype, has been published (based on a previous post). If you’d like a copy of the essay, feel free to email us (socimages@contexts.org) and we’ll send it along. See the list of all of our Contexts essays here.
We are indebted to David Mayeda for writing a review of Sociological Images for Teaching Sociology. Thank you, Dr. Mayeda, for all your kind words!
We are super excited to report that the Ms. magazine blog has begun partially syndicating our work. If you’re a reader of their blog, you may have seen us pop up there already.
And we were tickled to hear our post on the worldwide penetration of Facebook used as a source in a Scientific American podcast (we’re in the Totally Bogus quiz at about 21:45).
Finally, this is your monthly reminder that we’re on Twitter and Facebook. Let us invade your everyday life and be your friend!
Lisa Wade, PhD is an Associate Professor at Tulane University. She is the author of American Hookup, a book about college sexual culture; a textbook about gender; and a forthcoming introductory text: Terrible Magnificent Sociology. You can follow her on Twitter and Instagram.
Comments 3
Gail Hawkes — December 2, 2010
Greetings from The University of New England, Australia. We sociologists here have found these images wonderful, both for teaching and for our research. Keep them coming, and congratulations on the well-deserved nomination! Gail Hawkes
david mayeda — December 2, 2010
Aloha from Hawaii Pacific University in Honolulu. Sociological Images has been an extremely useful teaching tool for me over the past year. My review (noted in this post's body) summarizes my general thoughts on the site.
Additionally, since I penned that review, I have increased my usage of the site in my classes. In particular, for my "Cross-Cultural Relations" course, I have an assignment each semester in which students must draw 3 examples from the Sociological Images website and discuss the dominant narratives across those 3 examples and society at large. Here's a few examples of students' work for this assignment:
http://dumbrabbit.wordpress.com/2010/11/16/racial-constructs-slowly-acknowledging-mixed-race/
http://beryltaiwan.blogspot.com/2010/11/review-paper-3sociological-images.html
http://michelleolechowski.blogspot.com/2010/11/sociological-images.html
http://amara-noelle.blogspot.com/2010/11/women.html
http://brookehong.blogspot.com/2010/11/review-paper-sociological-images.html
I've even used some of the graphs profiled in the site in my Research Methods and Social Statistics classes to discuss correlations, causality, and independent and dependent variables.
david mayeda — December 5, 2010
had to include this excellent paper too:
http://kristens-sociology-blog.blogspot.com/2010/11/you-are-beautiful-if.html