Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Road Rage?


A 2009 survey reports that 67% of commuters who deal with daily traffic noted that to have an easy ride to work they would be willing to give up the following:
1. part of their morning routine
2. television
3. showering
4. time with family

Number one is understandable and most likely a good solution. Number 2 is highly commendable and could well help the situation. Choice 3, a time saver for sure, can lead to a host of other problems, but choice 4-REALLY?

What would you give up to avoid getting stuck in daily traffic?

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Thanks for a great term

Greetings! I want thank you for making this blog a useful tool for our sociology class. I had a vision of how it might come together in this, its maiden run. You guys exceeded my expectations. I appreciate your candor and the respect you showed your classmates.

I will be using the blog again in the spring term. Feel free to check back in on the conversation with the next class. If you chose to enter the discussion, please identify yourself as a former student.

I wish you all the best in all your future academic endeavors.

Tom

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

I cannot tell a lie.

Greetings! Please follow the link below. Once you have read the article feel free to speak freely via this blog.

Tyler S. from the face to face class forwarded this one as a possible discussion starter.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100306/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iran

Tom

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Look Who's Coming to Dinner?


Societal norms change at different paces. Some move rapidly like our immersion into the electronic age and others more slowly, such as the gradual and ongoing change in racial, gender and ethnic equality. A current cultural shift in the U.S. has taken place within a generation.

In many settings as recently as twenty years ago, the family dinner table held a level of sanctity far more hallowed and revered than telephone calls. During dinner, should the phone ring, no one bothered to answer. Evolution moved this along to the status of answering the phone only to request a return call after the shared meal. In time this gave way to answering machines picking up the call, while all the diners paused between words and bites to listen.

In modern day homes, and even more notably in restaurants, phones have established a place on table tops more prominent than napkins or silverware. During meals people openly write and receive e-mails and text messages as well as make and accept phone calls. Without question, this is a cultural shift, but to what end--productivity? Embedded in the action is the notion that whoever is at the other end of the call or electronic message holds more importance and value than the person(s) who share a table and a meal.

Use this blog to (A) note positive or negative implications to this paradigm shift or (B) suggest at least two rules for cell phone etiquette that should be followed in today’s society.