Re: Rap essay

2003-06-09 Thread sylvestm
On Thu, 5 Jun 2003 07:11:35 -0700 FRANTZ, SUE [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote.
I have a student this quarter who could make a living as a writer.  In
fact,

I'm pretty sure he could give Dave Barry a run for his money.  I just
graded

his last exam, and he wrote the answer to the second essay as a rap.  It's

not often students have fun ~taking a test~!  =)


 What grade did the student get for the rap essay?
 
Michael Sylvester

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Psych terminology in popular media

2003-06-09 Thread Linda Walsh
Tipsters:
I'm looking for media examples (TV, movies, song lyrics) of the use of specific 
Psychology related terms or references that one would probably not understand
without taking a Psych class. A somewhat dated example is an episode from
Northern Exposure that makes reference to Kitty Genovese. Do you know of some
others?

Linda Walsh
University of Northern Iowa
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Re: Psych terminology in popular media

2003-06-09 Thread Mark A. Casteel
Hi Linda. I'm reminded of Phil Hartman's Anal Retentive Chef from 
Saturday Night Live of a number of years ago. Although the term anal is 
used by just about everyone, it's my contention that only psych majors 
would really understand all of the nuances of Hartman's characterization.

-- Mark

At 11:22 AM 6/9/03 -0500, Linda Walsh wrote:
Tipsters:
I'm looking for media examples (TV, movies, song lyrics) of the use of 
specific
Psychology related terms or references that one would probably not understand
without taking a Psych class. A somewhat dated example is an episode from
Northern Exposure that makes reference to Kitty Genovese. Do you know of some
others?

Linda Walsh
University of Northern Iowa
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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*
Mark A. Casteel, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Psychology
Penn State York
1031 Edgecomb Ave.
York, PA  17403
(717) 771-4028
*
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Re: Psych terminology in popular media

2003-06-09 Thread Drnanjo


Hi again,

To follow Mark's suggestions, actually Saturday Night Live is probablya great source of psychology humor. There is also Chris Farley's motivational speaker, and a number of good skits about prejudice and stereotyping - probably from all decades of the show. Check your local video store or Amazon.com for collections of skits form the show.

Nancy Melucci
LBCC
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Re: Psych terminology in popular media

2003-06-09 Thread Jim Matiya

Hi linda,
a little differentbut also available on ebay I believe.
Pinky and the Brain in an episode called, 

Pavlov's Mice:
The mice attempt to steal Russia's crown jewels during a lunar eclipse.
Jim
Jim Matiya Carl Sandburg High School 

131st and LaGrange Road 

Orland Park, IL 60462 

Lewis University. Romeoville, IL 

Moraine Valley Comm. College. Palos Hills, IL 

Illinois Virtual High School 

[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Webpages: http://www.d230.org/cs/matiya 



From: Linda Walsh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Psych terminology in popular media 
Date: Mon, 09 Jun 2003 11:22:16 -0500 (CDT) 
 
Tipsters: 
I'm looking for media examples (TV, movies, song lyrics) of the use of specific 
Psychology related terms or references that one would probably not understand 
without taking a Psych class. A somewhat dated example is an episode from 
Northern Exposure that makes reference to Kitty Genovese. Do you know of some 
others? 
 
Linda Walsh 
University of Northern Iowa 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 
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Re: Psych terminology in popular media

2003-06-09 Thread Carolyn Oxenford
This is also dated, but there was a group in the 80's called Pavlov's 
Dog whose album was called At the sound of the bell

Linda Walsh wrote:

Tipsters:
I'm looking for media examples (TV, movies, song lyrics) of the use of specific 
Psychology related terms or references that one would probably not understand
without taking a Psych class. A somewhat dated example is an episode from
Northern Exposure that makes reference to Kitty Genovese. Do you know of some
others?

Linda Walsh
University of Northern Iowa
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: Psych terminology in popular media

2003-06-09 Thread Robert Herdegen
At 11:22 AM 6/9/2003 -0500, you wrote:
>Tipsters:
>I'm looking for media examples (TV, movies, song lyrics) of the use of specific 
>Psychology related terms or references that one would probably not understand
>without taking a Psych class. A somewhat dated example is an episode from
>Northern Exposure that makes reference to Kitty Genovese. Do you know of some
>others?
>
>Linda Walsh
>University of Northern Iowa
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
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>You are currently subscribed to tips as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
In the Rolling Stones song, Bitch, from the Sticky Fingers album:

Yeah, when you call my name,
I salivate like a Pavlov dog.
Yeah, when you lay me out,
My heart is beating louder than a big bass drum.

And yes, it probably is offensive to some people. No need to kill the messenger.

Bob




Robert T. Herdegen III
Elliott Professor of Psychology and Chairman
Department of Psychology
Hampden-Sydney College
Hampden-Sydney, VA  23943
434-223-6166
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Re: Psych terminology in popular media

2003-06-09 Thread Maxwell Gwynn

How about the song We do what we're told (Milgram's 37) by Peter
Gabriel. 

Ironically, Peter Gabriel has often used this song as a sing-a-long at
concerts.

we do what we're told, we do what we're told
we do what we're told, told to do

we do what we're told, we do what we're told
we do what we're told, told to do

one doubt
one voice
one war
one truth
one dream


-Max

Maxwell Gwynn, PhD  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Department of Psychology(519) 884-0710 ext 3854
Wilfrid Laurier University
Waterloo, Ontario  N2L 3C5 Canada



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RE: I/O psychology

2003-06-09 Thread Horton, Joseph J.
Thanks Joe: Yours is the only response I received to that portion of my
query.

Joe

Joseph J. Horton Ph. D.
Faculty Box 2694
Grove City College
Grove City, PA  16127
 
(724) 458-2004
 
In God we trust, all others must bring data.

-Original Message-
From: Joe Marrone [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Saturday, June 07, 2003 9:54 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences
Subject: RE: I/O psychology

Dear Joe---check out Volume 12 (Industrial and Organizational Psychology) of
the recently published Handbook of Psychology edited by A. M. Goldstein,
Wiley, 2003.

If Vol 12 on forensic psychology, which I have, is an indication, then the
I/O volume is probably excellent.


Joe Marrone, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology
Siena College
Loudonville, NY  12211
(518) 783-8747
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

-Original Message-
From: Horton, Joseph J. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, May 22, 2003 4:39 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences
Subject: I/O psychology


I will be teaching I/O psychology for the first time in Fall. I would
appreciate any syllabi or class projects that you would share. As this is
out my area, the college will purchase me a reference for I/O. If you could
choose only one graduate level reference to help me get up to speed what
would you recommend?

Thanks!
Joe

Joseph J. Horton Ph. D.
Faculty Box 2694
Grove City College
Grove City, PA  16127

(724) 458-2004

In God we trust, all others must bring data.


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Re: Psych terminology in popular media

2003-06-09 Thread RACEDON4100
My personal favorite is the fact that most movies/TV shows say It's psychsomatic, 
it's all in his/her mind. Psychsomatic illnesses are real. The term they should use 
is somatoform disorder

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Re: Psych terminology in popular media

2003-06-09 Thread RACEDON4100
I like Pink Floyd's song Brain damage

You raise the blade, you make the change, you rearrange me til I'm sane. You lock the 
door, throw away the key. There's someone in my head but it's not me.

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Psych terminology in media

2003-06-09 Thread Rob Weisskirch
let me add a few from TV  movies:

Tonite's rerun of Will  Grace she said, I'm sublimating my rage at you
with cheesecake.

Bill  Ted's Excellent Adventure--they bring Freud back and he encounters
a corn dog at the water park.  Hilarity ensues.
Good Will Hunting--good examples of transference.
Ordinary People--repressed memory?
Memento--retrograde amnesia (although it might anteriograde--I always
forget which).
I believe there was a cartoon for a period of time with Jon Lovitz called
Dr. Katz, a therapist.
Fight Club--projection.

Rob Weisskirch, MSW, Ph.D.
Human Development Program
Department of Liberal Studies, Building 15
100 Campus Center
California State University, Monterey Bay
Seaside, CA 93955-8001
(831) 582-5079
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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