Thursday, June 12, 2008

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Today’s Response
Middle Tennessee State University

Eight men (and one woman) out

The U.S. Supreme Court recently refused to rule on an appellate court decision upholding the right of fantasy baseball leagues to use the names and statistics of Major League Baseball (MLB) players. MLB wanted to license the data on the grounds that it was intellectual property, but the lower court determined that the information was in the public domain. Dr. Don Roy, management and marketing, says MLB should swallow its pride and join forces with fantasy league operators. “Today’s fantasy baseball market is made up of an estimated three million players, which is a fraction of the market for fantasy football (15-16 million),” Roy says. “There is room to grow the business, which only makes it more valuable because it would attract more advertising and sponsorship dollars to fantasy baseball—and to MLB.”
Contact Roy at 615-904-8564.
droy@mtsu.edu

Middle class morality?

Is a country’s economic development indicative of the relationship between the love of money and its workers’ satisfaction with their pay? Dr. Tom Tang, management and marketing, studied that question. Tang examined 29 geopolitical entities with gross domestic products (GDPs) ranging from more than $20,000 a year to less than $5,000 a year. He found that, in the high and median GDP groups, corporate ethical values were linked with the desire to “do good.” There also was a relationship between a low love of money and the desire to be ethical. “The high GDP group had the lowest unethical behavioral intention, as expected, whereas the median GDP group had the lowest corporate ethical values, the highest unethical behavioral intention, the highest percentage of bad apples, the highest level of irritation, and the strongest relationship between love of money and unethical behavioral intention,” Tang says.

Contact Tang at 615-898-2005.
ttang@mtsu.edu

Book it!

Do the prices of college textbooks have you and the student in your life scratching your heads? Dr. Janet Belsky, psychology professor and author of several textbooks, says educators are not getting rich at the student’s expense. She asserts that it’s a labor of love for the academics who choose to do it. “Basically, with a book like mine costing $80 new, the used book dealer is going to pocket about $40, $50 or $60—or more—depending on how often the book is sold back and bought again for no investment of time or money, except sitting at the buy-back table,” Belsky claims. And worse yet, the professors’ free books, the complimentary texts they are sent can even be sold as ‘new books’ if the professors choose to sell them, which gives textbook authors nothing and undercuts the publishers because the book is being sold as ‘new’ at a lower cost.”

Contact Belsky at 615-898-5935.
jbelsky@mtsu.edu

TR EXTRA

“LANGUAGE IS THE DRESS OF THOUGHT.”—SAMUEL JOHNSON--MTSU’s annual Summer Language Institute will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. June 16-20, June 23-27 and July 28-August 1 at the University School of Nashville. Languages to be taught will include Mandarin Chinese, French, German, Scottish Gaelic, Arabic and Spanish Levels 1 and 2. The innovative teaching methods used at the institute, are designed to teach students a second language the same way they learned their first—by relating vocabulary to movement and learning grammar through storytelling. Students are completely immersed in the language from the first day of instruction in a fun environment. “I can now tell people who regret never having studied a language or who had a bad experience that it is not too late,” says Dr. Shelley Thomas, MTSU associate professor and institute founder. Contact Thomas at 615-898-5757 or
shthomas@mtsu.edu.

“ENGLAND SWINGS LIKE A PENDULUM DO.”—ROGER MILLER--The Fab Four, miniskirts and go-go boots, the “mods” versus the “rockers”—If you’re looking for a fun and informative course to take this summer, MTSU is offering British Popular Culture from 10:10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday July 7-August 7. This English course, taught by Dr. Jill Hague, will look at the development of popular culture in the United Kingdom after World War II, focusing on innovations in music, film and drama. Students will examine the cultural, historical and political contexts of the 1950s, the phenomenon of “Swinging London” and the Beatles in the 1960s and the rise of punk culture in the 1970s. Contact Hague at 615-904-8123 or ahague@mtsu.edu.

THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT--You can spend part of your summer examining the fascinating Native American history and prehistory of the Southwest and get geography or history credit for it at MTSU! The class is titled “Geography of Native Americans” and will be conducted for the 15th consecutive year by Dr. Doug Heffington, professor of historical geography and director of the Global Studies Program. “The class focuses on the examination of the human/land relationships between the native peoples of New Mexico and their natural environment,” Heffington says. “Most of our base camp is in the small colonial village of Truchas, which dates to the mid-1700s with its blend of Genizaro, Mestizo and Hispano cultures. The trip/course starts July 21st and takes about nine days to complete.” The cost is approximately $400 per student and includes transportation, two meals a day, lodging and entry fees. Contact Heffington at 615-898-5978 or jheffing@mtsu.edu.

“BLESSED ARE THE CRACKED FOR THEY SHALL LET IN THE LIGHT.”—GROUCHO MARX--How do you see God? Do you see the Almighty as a man, a woman, an ambiguous force of nature? These are questions to be explored this summer as Dr. Bob Pondillo, electronic media communication, teaches “Images of God in the American Media” from July 7 through August 8 at MTSU. Pondillo and his students will pursue the subject by examining television programs ranging from “Family Guy” to “Joan of Arcadia” and movies like “Oh, God” and “The Last Temptation of Christ.” Pondilo says, “We’ll have an intellectual discussion and a cosmological discussion and a theological discussion—a discussion, not make it a time to convert people or anything like that. Let’s just talk and try to understand.” Contact Pondillo at 615-904-8465 or pondillo@mtsu.edu.

ALMA MATER MATTERS--MTSU’s Alumni Summer College, a two-and-a-half-day event full of fun, fellowship and presentations on local topics, is slated for June 25-27. Faculty, staff and other experts who are slated to speak include Dr. Lisa Pruitt, director of the Gore Center, on “A Century of Service: The History of MTSU”; Dr. Rhonda Hoffman, associate professor of equine science, will introduce attendees to the latest research and technology in the horse world; and alumni Gloria Christy (’71) and Bill Shacklett (’73) will discuss the technical world of photo restoration. Also on tap are a trip to the Grand Ole Opry, dinner at Caney Fork Fish Camp and a scavenger hunt. Contact Rhonda Wright at 1-800-533-6878 or rwright@mtsu.edu.

HOMETOWN BOYS AND GIRLS MAKE GOOD--ATTENTION, EDITORS AND REPORTERS: Admissions officials have released their list of some 554 students who, as of May 30, have accepted scholarships to attend MTSU beginning in the fall 2008 semester. To obtain the list of those students from your Tennessee county who were awarded scholarships for the upcoming academic term, please go to http://www.mtsunews.com and click on the “Scholarship Recipients” link on the upper left-hand side of the page. Click on the “2008--June” link, which will lead to an alphabetical, county-by-county listing. This list includes each student’s hometown, high school, name of scholarship and award amount. Please note that students are listed by county based upon the information they provided to MTSU’s Records Office regarding their permanent address. Contact the Office of Admissions at 615-898-2111 or visit http://www.mtsu.edu/~admissn.

ROLL OVER, JUNIOR!--Everything a human being is concerned with is based on learning and theory. That’s what makes the Learning Theories class being taught by Dr. Donald Kendrick through Thursday, July 3, at MTSU so fascinating. Kendrick, a psychology professor, says, “For example, students will gain insights and learn specific techniques to train their pets to do fun and funny things. These training techniques also generalize to raising children, the effectiveness and ineffectiveness of punishment, accepted practices on permitting young children to sleep with Mom (and Dad), the nature of the mother-infant bond, breaking bad habits and acquiring new ones, and how to get your roommate to have more respect for your things!” Contact Kendrick at 615-898-2706 or psyskip@mtsu.edu.

THE PEN IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PLAYSTATION.--Budding authors who have completed fourth through 12th grades will invade MTSU next week for the Youth Writers’ Camp presented by the Middle Tennessee Writing Project. This two-week day camp through June 19 helps kids who are excited about writing make connections with experienced classroom teachers who have a passion for writing. The camp counselors strive to make sure that students become more confident in their own writing ability while fostering a supportive, non-threatening environment. Youngsters will receive realistic feedback from peers and mentors, explore new writing styles and topics, and meet published authors. For more information, visit http://www.mtsu.edu/~mtwp or contact Angela Pope, Youth Camp Coordinator, at pope_a@worldnet.att.net or Dr. Bobbie Solley, MTWP Director, at bsolley@mtsu.edu.

DAD, TAKE THE LAMPSHADE OFF YOUR HEAD WHILE THE CAMERA’S ROLLING!--Working with perhaps the most technology-savvy generation of young adults ever, Dr. Lorne McWatters, history, will teach a class titled “Genealogy and Documentary Film: Doing Your Own Family History in Film” to undergraduates for the first time at MTSU this fall. “The fall class will have 15 students, and each student will make a film about 10 minutes long on either some aspect of his/her family (genealogy) or some aspect of the history of MTSU,” McWatters says. “In speaking to students about the class, I found the undergraduates to be very enthusiastic, much more so than the graduate students, in general.” Contact McWatters at 615-898-5805 or dmcwatte@mtsu.edu.