I would disagree in the sense that I don't think that asking them to do it  
for a movie or TV show is any less worthy a task than doing it for a 
book...we  all take in a lot of information via electronic media...i think that 
teaching  students to compare the facts (as they are understood) to the 
entertainment  industry's versions.
 
Nancy Melucci
LBCC
 

Make a  Small Loan, Make a Big Difference - Check out Kiva.org to Learn 
How!  

 
In a message dated 10/14/2009 1:42:51 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

My 2  cents worth here--I think it depends on the assignment. If the
assignment  is to find a novel with some psychological themes and compare 
the
treatment  of those themes in the book with scientific knowledge about them,
it sounds  like this book might be an option. I would hate to have students
assume  that the author has done the research and is portraying themes
accurately,  but researching that would be, I think, a worthy exercise. It
also occurs  to me that it would be good to know when the story is coming 
out
in movie  format, in case your student plans to find a way around reading  a
novel.


Alice LoCicero

Alice LoCicero, Ph.D., ABPP, MBA,  
Associate Professor and Chair, Social Science
Endicott  College
Beverly, MA 01915
978 232 2156 

-----Original  Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]  
Sent: Wednesday, October 14, 2009 4:13 PM
To: Teaching in the  Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re: [tips] Shutter Island

ps:  here are the themes I did find:

Treatment of the criminally insane in  psychiatric hospitals in the 1950's 
is
a theme of the book so the student  could research that.

Also PTSD and coping based on Korean war  experiences.

Also, what defines insanity. And whether that would be the  appropriate term
to use in this case.

Finally, what indicators lead  towards a diagnosis of schizophrenia for the
main character, and what  indicators fail to support such a diagnosis.

Annette

Annette  Kujawski Taylor, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology
University of San  Diego
5998 Alcala Park
San Diego, CA  92110
619-260-4006
[email protected]


---- Original message  ----
>Date: Wed, 14 Oct 2009 12:33:08 -0700 (PDT)
>From:  <[email protected]>  
>Subject: [tips] Shutter Island   
>To: "Teaching in the Psychological Sciences  (TIPS)"
<[email protected]>
>
>I have a student  who wants to read Shutter Island by Lehane for a homework
assignment in my  honors intro to psych class. I generally don't allow 
novels
but he assures  me that the story line about psychopathology is one he could
easily  critique. 
>
>Are any tipsters familiar with this book? With  Lehane's work in general?
>
>I am not. A web search doesn't give  me any real substance to judge  on.
>
>Annette
>
>Annette Kujawski Taylor,  Ph.D.
>Professor of Psychology
>University of San  Diego
>5998 Alcala Park
>San Diego, CA  92110
>619-260-4006
>[email protected]
>
>---
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>
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