A Traveler From Altruria Book Analysis

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ESSAI

Volume 8

Article 34

4-1-2011

A Traveler from Altruria: Book Analysis


M. Lisa Parenti
College of DuPage

Follow this and additional works at: http://dc.cod.edu/essai


Recommended Citation
Parenti, M. Lisa (2010) "A Traveler from Altruria: Book Analysis," ESSAI: Vol. 8, Article 34.
Available at: http://dc.cod.edu/essai/vol8/iss1/34

This Selection is brought to you for free and open access by the College Publications at [email protected].. It has been accepted for inclusion in
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Parenti: <em>A Traveler from Altruria:</em> Book Analysis

A Traveler from Altruria: Book Analysis


by M. Lisa Parenti
(History 1140)

n analyzing A Traveler from Altruria by William Dean Howells, the authors descriptions and
discussions of his women characters provide a coherent picture of what he believed to be the
traits and attitudes of an ideal woman.
The focus of the book was on the interactions between the narrator, Mr. Twelvemough, and his
guest from Altruria, Mr. Homos, as well as conversations with a number of people encountered by
the two during Homoss stay in America. Through these exchanges, Howells intended to display the
discrepancy between the idealized life of Americans during the late 19th centurys Gilded Age and
the realities of the existence of people just below that gilded surface, in contrast to the utopian world
of Altruria (thus also expounding on class differences). To enrich this analysis, Howells, a supporter
of the Progressive movement, included a depiction of what he saw as the role of women in American
society. The introduction of Mrs. Makely, and later Mrs. Camp, to the narrative allowed Howells to
highlight that role and, as a consequence, highlight his own perceptions about how women were
viewed and treated, especially in contrast to women in Altruria.
In the beginning of the book, Twelvemough took Homos to a resort in the country, a place
where the narrator told Homos professional men and their families went in the summer for
relaxation. Looking for clarification, Homos asked, The ladies come early in the summer, you
say....What do they come for? (45). Learning they come to rest, he asked what they needed to rest
from. Twelvemough replied, From care.There is nothing so killing as household care. Besides,
the sex seems to be born tired (46). As working-class women of the era were currently toiling along
side men in factories, performing tasks far more exhausting than household chores, this is a negative
statement about the privilege of upper-class women. Yet, in spite of his disdainful comment,
Howells went on to write of American mens willingness to subordinate themselves to our women.
(46) From this, Homos assumed There can be no doubt that the influence of women in your public
affairs must be of the greatest advantage (46). He was surprised to learn that this was not the case.
In questioning Twelvemough, Homos discovered that women were more cultivated than men, better
read, better schooled, and relieved of most domestic cares. So, he asked, why have they no part in
your public affairs? (47). The answer they dont want it (47) was not satisfactory to Homos; he
asked again. The narrator deferred the question, and said Homos would have to ask the women
himself. In not giving a definitive answer to Homos, Howells left the question open. This forced the
reader to consider how American society dealt with women regarding this issue, one hotly debated
during the late 19th century by both proponents and adversaries of the Womens Suffrage movement.
Howells then introduced his major female character, Mrs. Makely. Homos was interested in
speaking with Makely to learn about the class differences he saw in American society, and was
especially interested in her definition of a lady which, according to Makely, did not imply rank.
Makely said a lady must be above the sordid anxieties in every way (74). Her description led
Homos to conclude that a lady should have nothing to do. Makely took exception to that: Nothing
to doa lady is busy from morning till nightYou dont have a moment to yourself; your life isnt
your own! (75). It was the social (teas, concerts, charity meetings) life Makely described, not the
working (cooking, scrubbing, mopping) life. This led Homos to ask what the use of your social life
is? (75). When Makely replied, Use? Why should it have any? It kills time (75), Homos
concluded, Then you are shut up to a hideous slavery without use, except to kill time, and you
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ESSAI, Vol. 8 [2010], Art. 34

cannot escape from it without taking away the living of those dependent on you? (75). This far
from flattering, even withering, depiction of the upper-class American woman forced the reader,
once again, to consider the role to which women were consigned. Perhaps the Gilded Age had put
women in gilded cages. In contrast, Homos stated that everyone in Altruria does some kind of
manual labor -- ladies, too. (73). Since Howells was presenting Altruria as his utopian country, we
see that he did not frown upon manual labor as did the characters of Twelvemough and Makely.
As Howells continued his story, he painted a negative picture of upper-class American women
regarding their views on health and exercise, as well. Since Makely had told Homos that ladies could
not do manual labor, he assumed they exercised. Makely said we prefer to take medicine (76), and
went on to describe as wrecks (77) those women who did exercise. A large percentage of the
working class in Howellss time included working women, so Howells knew women could certainly
handle exercise (and even exertion). Once again, Howells avoided a straight answer, and prodded
the reader to consider the divergent views of American and Altrurian society.
Soon after, Homos made a very droll comment about upper-class women. Homos and Makely
were observing working-class families, and Makely commented, its astonishing how strong and
well those women keep, with their great families and their hard work (79). Homos asked in reply if
they are aware of the sacrifices which the ladies of the upper classes make in leaving all the work to
them, and suffering from the nervous debility which seems to be the outcome of your society life?
(79). By now, Makely had described American women as weak, nervous, and incapable of physical
labor. Homoss sarcastic question will have led the reader to question that depiction. Now, not only
had society placed upper-class women in gilded cages, it had placed them on pedestals -- women
were too fragile to work, and like pieces of brittle porcelain, had been placed on a shelf for their own
protection. (Perhaps this was what the narrator meant when he said American men had subordinated
themselves to women.) Any man or woman reading that passage would have wondered: was this
how American women were viewed? And, yet again, they would have been left with the slightly
uncomfortable feeling that perhaps this view was not quite right.
Howells provided an insight into his opinion of working-class women with the introduction of
Mrs. Camp. Camp was a widow who was trying to hold onto her farm with the help of her son and
daughter. Instead of focusing solely on the plight of many farmers during this time of agrarian crisis,
and using the Camps story to illustrate it, Howells provided a side-story about Camp. The widow
described how things went bad for her: I tried to carry on the farm after he first went, and before
Reuben was large enough to help much, and ought to be in school, and I suppose I overdid (106).
Howells contrasted this view that women were too weak to handle farm labor with the Altrurians
comment, in Altruria every one works with his hands, so that the hard work shall not fall to any one
class; and this manual labor of each is sufficient to keep the body in health, as well as to earn a
living (109). Yet again, Howellss contrast showed American society, with its class and gender
stratifications, in an inferior light.
Having previously mentioned that American women were better educated than men, Howells
went on to discuss the value education held in the minds of upper-class men. As the banker character
stated, It is no use to pretend that there is any relation between business and the higher education.
There is no business man who will pretend that there is not often an actual incompatibility if he is
honest (116). Here, Howells had his American characters assert that education was bad for
business, and since during the late 19th century the business of America was business (even though
Coolidge did not assert that until the 1920s) with the rapid growth of big national firms and
monopolies, the logical conclusion would be that education was bad for America. These statements
would give pause to Americans reading this in the 19th century. What was it about business and
education that were at odds? How could that be good? Certainly America prided itself on its
colleges and universities. Once again, Howells gently prodded his readers to reconsider the status
quo.
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Parenti: <em>A Traveler from Altruria:</em> Book Analysis

At the end of his book, Homos gave a speech about his homeland. In it, he described an ideal
country, quite liberal and socialist by 19th century standards. In this utopian land, women were held
in a positive regard: it was possible for every woman to be a lady, even in competitive conditions.
Her instincts were unselfish, and her first thoughts were nearly always of others (157). In Altruria,
a lady need not be helpless. This was quite the contrast to Howellss depiction of Makely.
So, in 19th century America, upper-class women, as described by Howells, did not want to do
physical labor, considered the work they did to be quite demanding, felt that it was the working
classs job to support them, and believed that the upper class was doing them a favor by allowing it.
It could be argued that those were the opinions of Howells himself, as they were the prevailing
opinions of many Victorian-era gentlemen. However, by contrasting these views with those of the
Altrurian, Howells allowed the reader to see a society in which that was not the case. If Altrurian
women were the utopian ideal women, then American women, as Howells quietly asserted, were far
from ideal. Whether Howells himself thought the ideal woman should be involved in public affairs,
or should run farms, or be a full participant in society, is not known from his book. What is known,
though, is that in his story A Traveler from Altruria, Howells saw a society in which that could be,
and subtly wrote in a way so that others would be able to see it, as well.

Works Cited
Howells, William Dean. A Traveler from Altruria. Ed. David W. Levy. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins,
1996. Print.

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ESSAI, Vol. 8 [2010], Art. 34

Construction for a Healthier Home The Earth


by Zach Porlier
(Biology 1110)

ABSTRACT
growing global population will bring a demand for new homes and buildings. And with the
growing awareness of the effect of humans on our ecosystem, the demand for more
environmentally sound construction procedures arises. How should constructing a building be
approached with the Earth in mind? Can construction facilities be held accountable to ensure swift
and accurate procedures? Will this necessarily cost more to the consumer? Instead of simply
disposing of those buildings that are not up to the environmental standards of recent construction,
why not take those buildings and recycle their pieces for a newer facility? By reusing materials from
outdated buildings to create modern facilities and using more environmentally friendly practices,
construction companies can follow guidelines set by green building certification groups, such as
LEED, to create usable buildings with a lesser impact on the Earth. But in todays society of
economics and politics, sometimes doing the right thing is not the easiest.

WHY DOES IT MATTER?


With the world assessing ways to combat the growing amount of carbon being released into
the atmosphere, the greening of construction practices is a necessary change. With already
constructed buildings lending one-third of the worlds CO2 emissions, simply constructing buildings
by traditional methods will not help the calls for a reduction in global carbon emissions (Li and
Colombier 2008). And with 85% of the energy used by a building being used post-construction, the
need for not only environmentally friendly construction practices, but also the creation of
environmentally sound buildings is evident. The rise in urban development comes at the consequence
of replacing the plant life in those areas with buildings and roads, all of which attract heat
(Oberndorker et al 2007). With these areas attracting more heat, the use of more energy for cooling
the facilities is necessary. This makes not only the sustainability of the initial building process the
only factor to keep in mind, as the long-term sustainability is another piece to look at. Even if a
facility is constructed with environmentally friendly building practices, heating, cooling, and lighting
appliances can still cause the building to have a large carbon footprint if the energy efficiency of
those pieces is not considered during construction.
GREEN CERTIFICATION AND LEED
The earliest rating system for building sustainability was created by the British Research
Establishment in 1990, and it was called the Building Research Establishment Environmental
Assessment Method, or the BREEAM (Gowri 2004). This idea of rating building sustainability led to
the creation of the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design system (LEED), and this is the
process currently used in the United States and Canada. A building under the LEED system can be
certified at a basic certification, silver, gold, or platinum all based on a point system. These points
can be earned based on the buildings water efficiency, the use of energy and atmosphere protection,
indoor environmental quality, the material and resources used, the design process, and the
sustainability of the site as a whole. Points for the design process are awarded based on innovation
and the use of procedures and development ideas not addressed by the LEED team (Gowri 2004).
Some of the criteria have set prerequisites for obtaining points, such as the necessity of a recycling
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Parenti: <em>A Traveler from Altruria:</em> Book Analysis

collection and storage area for those using the building. This has been a successful rating program,
and has led to a greater demand for sustainable construction in the United States and Canada, with
green buildings accounting for about 15% of public construction.
THINKING ABOUT IT NOW BEFORE ITS TOO LATE
With about 85% of the energy use of a building taking place post-construction, planning for
sustainability must not only take into account the construction period, but long-term use as well (Li
and Colombier 2008). Energy consumption of buildings has more than doubled since 1980, and 52%
of the energy used by a building is for space heating. While some believe that using sustainable
building procedures can raise the cost of construction by as much as 17%, that increase can be
brought down to 5% or less when taking into consideration long-term savings by implementing more
energy-efficient technology during construction, so as to avoid costs due to inefficient design and
equipment. China has already begun to improve the energy efficiency of buildings being constructed,
as well as retrofitting existing buildings, and seeks to decrease the countrys CO2 emissions some
2.54 Mt by 2010. While this may be impressive, the average energy consumption of a building in
China is almost twice as much as some European countries, such as Sweden and Denmark. Some
buildings are implementing a green roof system in urban environments to deal with the issues of
energy use as well as storm water retention (Oberndorker et al 2007).
With many urban environments consisting of dark colored roads and roofs, these areas are
generally much warmer than the surrounding areas, and thus need use more energy for cooling
purposes. A study in Ottawa, Japan found that the annual heat gain of a building could be reduced by
up to 95% by switching from a regular roof to a green roof. These green roofs reduce the heat gain
from the building by reducing the amount of heat transferred from the roof to the building itself, and
a study in Singapore found that the typical heat transfer from a green roof was less than 10% of the
total from a regular roof. Implementing ideas and design such as this during construction can have
positive effects not only on the cost of energy use during a buildings life span, but also on the
Earths environment, as well.
USING WHATS THERE TO SAVE WHATS LEFT
A three-bedroom home creates four to seven tons of leftover debris upon completion, at least
60% of which can be recycled or used for the new building (Segelken 1997). And while some
facilities may not accept the refuse, there are ways to reuse the pieces, such as leftover wood. It can
be reused to make furniture or be chipped and used as mulch for landscaping. Wood has one of the
largest environmental impacts of resources used for buildings, and it is also one of the easiest ones to
reuse and recycle (Bohne et al 2008). For steel buildings, reusing the steel from previous buildings
takes 47% less oil and releases 86% less emissions than if the constructors had created new steel
(Gorgolewski 2006). The Mountain Equipment Co-op building in Ottawa, Canada has steel
components from a building previously on that site, and has earned an LEED certification rating of
gold.
European legislation has begun to make the producers of a building responsible for the refuse
material after a construction project, so it makes recycling and reuse favorable to the producers of a
building. But reuse of material does not always have to mean the individual resources of a building.
In the Gulf of Mexico, rather than destroy the 4000 decommissioned oil rigs, the Morris Architects
design company has created a plan that turns these rigs into a series of high-end hotels, getting power
from wind turbines and wave energy generators (Birkett 2009). Rather than simply reusing the steel
and other materials, they are reusing the entire structures, with minor modifications.

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CONCLUSION
The construction of a building is not a small procedure, and the environmental impacts can be
quite large, as well. But by innovative planning and design, sustainable building practices are simple,
affordable, and good for the environment. Thinking about the energy use of a building prior to
construction and assessing how one can use building materials already in place to cut down on the
need for new materials are just two ways to increase the sustainability of a construction project, and
new certifications and legislative standards continue to develop and improve. A beautiful and
comfortable home no longer has to take a large toll on humans first home, the Earth.

Works Cited
Birkett D. 2009. The global engineer. Engineering and Technology 4: 85.
Bohne R, Brattebo H, Bergsdal H. 2008. Dynamic eco-efficiency projections for construction and
demolition waste recycling strategies at the city level. Journal of Industrial Ecology 12: 5268.
Gorgolewski M. 2006. The implications of reuse and recycling for the design of steel buildings.
Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering 33: 489-496.
Gowri K. 2004. Green Building Rating Systems: An Overview. ASHRAE Journal 46: 56-60.
Li J, Colombier, M. 2009. Managing carbon emissions in China through building efficiency. Journal
of Environmental Management 90: 2436-2447.
Oberndorfer E, Lundholm J, Bass B, Coffman R, Doshi H, Dunnett N, Gaffin S, Kohler M, Liu K,
Rowe B. 2007. Green Roofs as Urban Ecosystems: Ecological Structures, Functions, and
Services. Bioscience 57: 823-833.
Segelken R. 1997. Scientists weigh trash to reduce waste, save landfill space. Human Ecology 25: 2.

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Parenti: <em>A Traveler from Altruria:</em> Book Analysis

Species Extinction From Anthropogenic Disturbance Versus Habitat Resilience: Despair Or Hope
For Planet Earths Viable Biodiversity
by James T. Ricker
(Biology 1110)

Introduction
he Merchants of Venus is an overlooked novella by Frederick Pohl. In it, the advertising has
run amuck, leading to runaway consumerism, suppression of environmental damage
awareness, addictions, and unbridled capitalism. Horrific when it was published, read in light
of 2009 it seems almost tame and matter of fact. There is one planet Earth that holds seven billion
human beings in a vast variety of circumstances. Some drive Hummers just for a few blocks to buy a
Starbucks coffee, while many walk miles for a clay jar of dirty diseased water. Perhaps 1/100th of one
percent of Earths prairie grass biomes remain, open sores abound on the planet from fevered
searches for minerals to make things, and CO2 (as shown by Withgott et al [2008]), and other
greenhouse gasses have been poured into our atmosphere at an alarming increased rate. Ornamental
and more tropical plants with high water and maintenance requirements are replacing those plants
that used to grow in harmony, formerly creating viable habitats that refreshed and rejuvenated our
land, sea and air. The question becomes if we already are past the point of ultimate Earthly
extinction, or if it is yet possible to reverse our abuse of our living home and find a way to allow
people-kind to continue on in a sustainable planet-wide habitat.

Despair
Habitat destruction is a major anthropogenic disturbance to ecosystems. Chen et al (2009)
find this can lead to an unprecedented rate of species extinction. This includes extinction debt, which
is the number of future species loss by current habitat destruction, and extinction order, both of
which are crucial for efficient conservation plans. When climate change and biological invasion (also
both human activity driven) are included, studies have shown species disappearing up to 1000 times
faster than without the human intervention. Once a portion of habitat equal to the equilibrium of the
focal species is destroyed, the species is doomed to extinction.
Chiba et al (2009) concluded that local-scale diversity patterns are not necessarily regulated
by contemporary processes, but also from historical events such as habitat changes and selective
extinctions that occurred in the past. Hence, the effects of habitat destruction remain long after the
habitats recovery.
Global warming and increased human water use are attributed to reducing and changing
Australian wetlands, from species-rich freshwater communities to species-poor salt tolerant
communities (Nielsen and Brock 2009). Short term recovery is possible in some communities, but
long term indicates fewer wetlands with increased salt levels and only surviving as wetlands with
colonization by salt tolerant species adapted for the new hydrological conditions. As the landscape
becomes more developed to accommodate the need for water in a warmer drying climate, increasing
human intervention will result in a net loss of wetlands and wetland diversity.
Hope
Verd and Valiente-Banuet (2008) define facilitation as a positive interaction assembling
ecological communities and preserving global biodiversity. Going beyond pair interactions with plant
species, they show that a few generalist nurses facilitate a large number of species. Behaving as do
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ESSAI, Vol. 8 [2010], Art. 34

mutualistic networks, these generalist nurses, the most abundant species in the community, make
facilitation network communities strongly resistant to extinction, and the nested structure yields
greater biodiversity. Interacting predator and prey species can be seen as keystone as they also can
relate to species extinction (Mills, et al 1993). If a keystone species is maintained, species extinction
can be lessened.
The Mesopotamian marshes of southern Iraq had been all but destroyed by Saddam Hussein's
regime by the year 2000. Efforts to reflood the marshes have not as yet been successful. Hence,
efforts taken to replace process, like reflooding a marsh, may not equal wetland restoration
(Richardson et al 2006). There are preliminary signs of hope for the restoration of the worlds Garden
of Eden, but any celebration is premature. Time will tell.
Conclusion
By any measurement it is clear that significant change to the environment of Earth is
underway. But change does not have to equal disaster. Just as Verd and Valiente-Banuet found
generalist nurses facilitating a large number of species, there are a number of survivors that might fill
future needs. Once the human species begins to go with the flow, the future has the potential to
yield unexpected rewards. Rather than massing huge mono species agricultural monopolies, then
shipping the produce thousands of miles, a modern update of the local feudal system could have
tremendous positive impact. Buying grapes laced with DDT from Chile because they are on sale
would no longer be a cultural imperative. The apples or peaches grown locally without pesticides
could easily substitute. Even the grapes might well grow further north and south as we deal with the
existing global warming. Miniaturization through nanotechnology can yield fantastic assistance and
results as our understanding grows. Virtual tours of destinations around the globe can minimize fossil
fuel extravagant travel. While some plants are dying as the climate gets warmer, there are many
weeds that thrive. If it is green, there should be a way to eat it or convert the mass into energy.
Imagination and ingenuity can turn despair into hope. Understanding and coordinated effort can be
the goal to allow the world and its inhabitants to thrive.

Works Cited
Chen L, Hui C. 2009. Habitat destruction and the extinction debt revisited: The Allee effect.
Mathematical Biosciences 221: 26-32.
Chiba S, Okochi I, Ohbayashi T, Miura D, Mori H, Kimura K, Wada S 2009. Effects of habitat
history and extinction selectivity on species-richness patterns of an island land snail fauna.
Journal of Biogeography: 36 1913-1922.
Mills L S, Soule M E, Doak, D F 1993. The keystone-species concept in ecology and conservation
Bioscience 43: 219-224.
Nielsen D L, Brock M A 2009. Modified water regime and salinity as a consequence of climate
change: prospects for wetlands of Southern Australia. Climatic Change 95: 523-533.
Richardson C, Hussain N A 2006. Restoring the Garden of Eden: An Ecological Assessment of the
Marshes of Iraq. Bioscience 56: 477-489.
Verd M, Valiente-Banuet A 2008. The Nested Assembly of Plant Facilitation Networks Prevents
Species Extinctions. American Naturalist 172: 751-760.
Withgott J, Brennan S 2008. Reading History in the Worlds Longest Ice Core. Environment The
Science Behind the Stories Third Edition: Pearson Benjamin Cummings, San Francisco, CA.

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Margaret Sanger: The Fuel of Her Revolution


by Shannon Rohn
(History 1140)

fter spending years witnessing the horrors of motherhood on the Lower East side of
Manhattan while she was a nurse, Margaret Sanger bitterly resolved that nursing would not
help solve the vast tribulations of the floundering society. She wrote about the tragedies that
prompted her to become an advocate for the free use of contraceptives in her 1931 autobiography,
My Fight for Birth Control. After treating a mother who died at age twenty-eight, Sanger exclaimed,
I would never go back again to nurse womens ailing bodies while their miseries were as vast as the
stars (Awakening and Revolt 3). Sanger alluded to the fact that working womens problems due to
excessive reproduction were so great that they were comparable to the cosmos. Thus, Sanger spent
the rest of her life seeking to reduce this hardship. Although controversial in her actions and stances
on reproductive, racial, and economic views, Sanger nevertheless pioneered the effort to make
contraceptives available. Her legacy continues today in the form of the institution she started,
Planned Parenthood, amidst endless praises and criticisms. In her autobiography, Sanger exclaims,
Women should have the knowledge of contraception (Awakening 3). Her story serves to remind
generations of the hardships women faced in the early 1900s and to voice the still debated opinion
that women should have control over their own bodies.
Sangers views about the need for contraception were first fueled by her family life. Her
mother suffered the toils of excessive motherhood, having had eighteen pregnancies and eleven
children (History & Successes). She died in 1899 at the age of fifty due to tuberculosis, and Sanger
became convinced that the excessive passion of her father led her mother to her grim fate
(Awakening 1). Although critical of her father, Sanger gained some of political views from him. A
political radical himself, Michael Higgins provided his daughter with various books about strong
women, which Sanger later described as ammunition about the historical background of the
importance of women (Galvin). Ironically, Sangers father provided her with the tools to become a
liberated woman while still portraying a sexist male role in her life.
In Sangers professional life as a nurse, she witnessed further tragedies. Sanger claimed, I
have seen groups of fifty to one hundred women going to questionable officesfor cheap abortions
(Awakening 1). When such places were not available, Sanger described how women would resort to
drastic measures such as insert[ing] slippery-elm sticks, or knitting needles, or shoe hooks into the
uterus (Awakening 2). Sanger even saw some women so desperate that they committed suicide to
avoid pregnancy. Such a tragedy occurred when, according to Sanger, Mrs. Kellyput her head
into the gas oven to end her misery (Awakening 2). Not surprisingly, the state of affairs became a
nightmare for Sanger (Awakening 1).
The desperation of the women resounded in Sanger, and she did her best within the stifling
constraints of the law to give them information that would prevent the women from harming
themselves. Unfortunately, she was not able to help in any significant way. The Comstock Law of
1873 banned the dissemination of birth control information and devices because they were obscene
(Maier et al. 561). Even when Sanger tried to pass information through word of mouth, women
disregarded her advice out of disbelief (Awakening 3).
Sanger also witnessed the discrimination women faced from male doctors. When she went to
treat the twenty-eight year old woman, Mrs. Sacks, who suffered after attempting an abortion, Sanger
revealed, Never had I worked so fast, so concentratedly as I did to keep alive that little mother
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(Awakening 2). Sanger put forth her best effort, while in contrast the doctor acted coldly. While
recovering, Mrs. Sacks expressed her fears about dying should she become pregnant again and the
doctor replied, Any more such capersand there will be no need to call me (Awakening 2). The
doctor bluntly hints at death to Mrs. Sacks in a condescending tone, emphasizing his indifference.
When Mrs. Sacks then asks him about the possibility of preventing pregnancy, the doctor said, Oh
ho!...You want your cake while you eat it too dont you. Well it cant be done Ill tell you the
only sure thing to do. Tell Jake to sleep on the roof! (qtd. in Awakening 2). The doctors statement
contained two eminently sexist positions. First, he used the metaphor to suggest that Mrs. Sack does
not deserve to engage in sexual intercourse without getting pregnant. Second, his sarcastic remark
about forcing her husband to sleep on the roof suggests that a husbands passions outweigh the wifes
desires about pregnancy, and in Mrs. Sacks case, death. After three months, Mrs. Sacks died because
of another home abortion and Sangers grief and anger at the original sentiments of the apathetic
doctor pushed her to a turning point. She was stunned and horrified (Kerber and De Hart 2) and the
doctors evident lack of compassion. However, Sanger promised never to let herself be part of that
kind of indescribably hurtful tragedy again.
Sanger experienced a dose of the hopelessness the desperate mothers like Mrs. Sacks felt.
Sanger then bitterly came to the conclusion that, It was the same result, the same story told a
thousand times before (Awakening 3). Although the situation appeared hopeless for so many
women, Sanger herself reached a turning point after witnessing Mrs. Sacks death. Sanger vowed, I
would tell the world what was going on in the lives of these poor women. I would be heard. No
matter what it should cost. I would be heard (Awakening 4)
After that point, Sanger never relinquished her vow. She began her crusade by writing
articles about womens health in the Socialist Party paper The Call, and by publishing those articles
in two publications: What Every Girl Should Know in 1916 and What Every Mother Should Know in
1917. Sanger also started her own paper for working class women, Woman Rebel, which promoted
the female right to sexual freedom and bodily control in 1914 (Galvin). During this period, Sanger
made clear many of her radical economic and political views. Her husband was a socialist who had
an effect on some of her views (Galvin). Thus, she wrote for The Call, joined the Socialist union,
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), and aided in strikes. She voiced an opinion that condemned
the capitalist system for manipulating the poor into producing an endless supply of cheap labor
(Steinem). Sanger further attacked capitalism, and exclaimed, Is flesh and blood and the virtue of
the mother of the future so cheap in this land of plenty that it can be sacrificed for such passing
whims?(What Every Woman Should Know 17). Sanger sarcastically mocked the romanticized view
of America by pointing out that women have few rights and are considered cheap in the eyes of
society.
Sangers radicalism fueled her desire to change American society. In 1914, she founded the
National Birth Control League (Lewis). Soon after, in 1916 she opened her first birth control clinic in
Brooklyn, New York (Censorship). The clinics efforts were aimed at poor, workingclass,
immigrant women, many of whom lined up hours before the opening (History & Successes).
Unfortunately, one such client was actually an undercover police officer who arrested Sanger and
shut the clinic down (Censorship). Nonetheless, when the court required Sanger to serve a thirty
day sentence at a workhouse, she managed to further her cause by offering other inmates advice on
sexual hygiene while the matrons were out of sight (Kerber and De Hart). In 1923, she furthered her
efforts by opening the Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau to disseminate contraceptives and
study the safety and effectiveness of such devices (History & Successes). In 1936, Sanger
encountered further judicial victories when the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that new
information about the dangers of unplanned pregnancy and the usefulness of contraceptives called for
a further liberalization of the Comstock Laws (History & Successes).
Needless to say, Sangers efforts were not universally hailed. The Catholic Church, in
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particular, condemned her efforts, and in 1921, Archbishop Patrick Hays even managed to have
authorities arrest Sanger before she was supposed to give a speech titled Birth Control: Is it Moral?
(Galvin). As historian Nancy Cott explained, While reliable birth control was welcomed by some,
others saw it as throwing a tremendous wrench into the social structure (qtd. in Galvin).
Nonetheless, Sanger continued to throw the wrenches. When her movement lost steam after womens
suffrage was obtained, Sanger made a controversial move by appealing to eugenists, claiming that
the use of birth control would lower birthrates in working-class and immigrant groups, and would
thus improve the quality of the nations population (Maier et al. 694). It was unclear as to what
Sangers personal view on eugenics was. Despite her comments, she helped W.E.B. Du Bois and
Mary McLeod Bethune open birth control clinics in the South (Steinem). Conversely, some of her
comments were used to justify the involuntary sterilization of thousands in twenty states (Steinem;
Galvin).
Even through such setbacks and criticisms, Sanger persevered. In 1957, geneticist Gregory
Goodwin Pincus finished creating the birth control pill, a term which Sanger coined, and which
Pincus called the product of [Sangers] pioneering resolution(Galvin). After this breakthrough,
Sanger witnessed a further triumph a year before her death when in 1965 the Supreme Court ruled in
favor of the Planned Parenthood League of Connecticut in the landmark case Griswold v.
Connecticut. The Court found that married couples had the right to privacy, and thus had the right to
seek information, and devices of contraception (Griswold v. Connecticut).
In Sangers time as a nurse she observed that, the menace of another pregnancy hung like a
sword over the head of every poor woman I came in contact with (Awakening 1). The simile
suggests that these women compared pregnancy to death, and thus, these women lived in fear. Sanger
saw the agony and angrily concluded that there existed no right to exhaust womens vitality and
throw them on the scrap-heap before the age of thirty-five (Awakening 1). After seeing such a fate
befall Mrs. Sacks, Sanger challenged the sexism, prejudice, and even the institutions of her time. She
exclaimed, Against the State, against the Church, against the silence of the medical profession,
against the whole machinery of dead institutions of the past, the woman of today arises (Lewis). Her
radicalism made her extremely biased, her actions made her controversial, but she nevertheless
continued the fight for womens rights. Her story brings understanding to the movement for birth
control through the surprising tales of what pregnant women endured. She titled the chapter of her
stories as an early nurse Awakening and Revolt (Awakening 1). No matter what opinions one has
of this woman, one cannot deny that once she awoke to the problems of the women of her time, she
never stopped her revolution.

Works Cited
"Censorship: Wielding the Red Pen - Margaret Sanger and Birth Control." University of Virginia
Library. Web. 03 Nov. 2009. <http://www2.lib.virginia.edu/exhibits/censored/sanger.html>.
Galvin, Rachel. "Margaret Sanger's "Deeds of Terrible Virtue"" National Endowment for the
Humanities. Web. 03 Nov. 2009. <http://www.neh.gov/news/humanities/199809/sanger.html>.
"Griswold v. Connecticut, U.S. Supreme Court Case Summary & Oral Argument." The Oyez Project
| Build 6. Web. 03 Nov. 2009. <http://www.oyez.org/cases/1960-1969/1964/1964_496>.
"History & Successes." Planned Parenthood. Web. 03 Nov. 2009.
<http://www.plannedparenthood.org/about-us/who-we-are/history-andsuccesses.htm#Sanger>.
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Kerber, Linda K. and Jane Sherron De Hard. Womens America: Refocusing the Past. 6th ed. New
York: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Lewis, Jone Johnson. "Margaret Sanger." Women's History - Comprehensive Women's History
Research Guide. Web. 03 Nov. 2009.
<http://womenshistory.about.com/od/sangermargaret/p/margaret_sanger.htm>.
Maier, Pauline, Merritt Roe Smith, and Alexander Keyssar. Inventing America, Vol. 2 (Second
Edition). New York: W. W. Norton, 2005. Print.
Sanger, Margaret. Awakening and Revolt. My Fight for Birth Control. New York: Farrar & Reinhart,
1931. Print.
Sanger, Margaret H. What Every Girl Should Know. Springfield, IL: United States CO., 1920. Print.
Steinem, Gloria. "TIME 100: Margaret Sanger." Breaking News, Analysis, Politics, Blogs, News
Photos, Video, Tech Reviews - TIME.com. Web. 03 Nov. 2009.
<http://www.time.com/time/time100/leaders/profile/sanger4.html>.

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What Employees Should Know About Electronic Performance Monitoring


by Susan Schumacher
(English 1102)

hat is electronic performance monitoring (EPM) technology and how does it affect the
workplace? As stated by Ariss, Nykodym, and Cole-Laramore, in the Industrial Age,
factories focused on employee productivity and equipment capacities to manage the cost
of products. The mass production of items such as automobiles and clothing are examples where,
according to M. R. Losey, employee monitoring has been utilized in the manufacturing industry for
several decades to track output, inventory, and general efficiency (qtd. in Mishra and Crampton).
In the Information Age, those same techniques have found their way into the office environment.
Todays factories are found in offices where people work on computers collecting data, generating
reports, and creating documents (Ariss, Nykodym, and Cole-Laramore 22). Harpers Index, January
2010, stated that the estimated change in the U.S. markets use of technology to monitor employees
and the workplace since 2007 has risen 43 percent. Employers are seeing a rise in personal use of the
Internet and phone at work, causing a major concern about the loss of employee productivity (not
focused on a task or customer) and the possible misuse of corporate assets, such as computer network
failures from high-volume usage and viruses, and firewall breaks that allow hackers to steal trade
secrets and compromise confidential information. While the practice of using EPM appears justified
from an employer point of view, how does EPM affect the workplace and employees? I plan to
review statistics that show an alarming increase of monitoring by U.S. companies, address why the
use of monitoring is on the rise, and discuss its effects on the work environment and employees.
Employees beware. Electronic monitoring of employees and consumers has quickly become
the new norm in American organizations and society. While monitoring can protect an organization
against theft and harassment suits, it also can help identify the misuse of corporate assets, which can
result in employee terminations. According to the 2007 Electronic Monitoring & Surveillance Survey
cosponsored by the American Management Association (AMA) and The ePolicy Institute, more than
half of all employers combined fire workers for e-mail and Internet abuse (AMA Press Room):
A total of 28% of employers, out of the 304 U.S. companies surveyed, fired workers
for the misuse of e-mail and the Internet for acts such as violation of company policy,
inappropriate or offensive language, excessive personal use, and breach of
confidentiality rules. Web surfing is a primary concern for employers, so much so,
that more than 65% monitor its use through software that blocks connections to
inappropriate Websites (this violation has increased 27% since the AMA/ePolicy
2001 survey). Additionally, employers engage in tracking content, keystrokes, and
time spent at the keyboard (45%). Some even track and review stored computer files
(43%), as well as monitoring the blogosphere (12%) and social networking sites
(10%). Employers also engage in monitoring time spent on and number of phone
calls, and record conversations and voicemail messages. The latest technology
includes video surveillance to reduce counter theft, violence, and sabotage; global
positioning systems (GPS) to track company vehicles and monitor company cell
phones; and ID/Smartcards technology that monitors and controls employee access to
buildings and data centers. Currently, a few companies are engaged in the highest
forms of monitoring technology such as fingerprint scans, facial recognition, and iris
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scans. (AMA Press Room)


While monitoring is designed to improve performance and reduce the loss of company assets,
its use can produce negative effects on an organization. Primarily, monitoring breaks down
communication and creates a void in personal contact or observation between workers, managers,
and customers. Sony Ariss, Nick Nykodym, and Aimee A. Cole-Laramore, researchers from the
University of Toledo, College of Business Administration, examined how the new virtual
organization has caused a reexamination of traditional controls. One aspect to be examined is
traditional management styles. In Douglas McGregors 1960 book, The Human Side of Enterprise, he
proposed two management theories to motivate employees. Both theories agree that managements
role is to assemble the factors of production, including people, for the economic benefit of the firm.
Of the two, Theory X assumes that people work only for money and security. The Theory X
approach relies on coercion, implicit threats, close supervision, and tight controls which in turn can
result in hostility, low-output on purpose, and hard-line union demands (NetMBA). Theory X is used
negatively when [m]anagers. . . use electronic monitoring to micromanage rather than to benefit the
company (AI-Shear, 2000) (qtd. in Ariss, Nykodym, and Cole-Laramore 24).
G. Stoney Alder, a professor in the Management Department, College of Business and
Technology at Western Illinois University wrote that:
[while] GEs customer satisfaction rate increased 96 percent after it implemented a
telephone surveillance system (similar results for AT&T, MCI, and Pacific Bell)
(Communications Daily, 1993; Gerdelman, 1993) . . . [a] number of case studies and
empirical investigation indicate that EPM may prove detrimental to both
organizations and their employees. Example: Research by Grant, Higgins, and Irving
(1988) demonstrated that EPM may hinder an organizations performance by inducing
workers to sacrifice product quality. . . . [m]onitored workers may focus exclusively
on quantitative aspects of the job to the detriment of customer service (Lewis, 1999).
(qtd. in Alder 325)
Furthermore, Alder stated that critics counter that EPM invades consumer and employee
privacy, decreases job satisfaction, increases stress, and engenders work environments characterized
by diminished trust and negative work relationships (Greengard, 1996; Lewis, 1999; Piturro, 1989).
Indeed, a frequent criticism of EPM is that monitored workers may sacrifice quality because
monitoring produces a natural preoccupation with quantitative results [Grant & Higgins, 1989;
Lewis, 1999] (qtd. in Alder 324-329).
The article Big Brother Bosses published in the Economist 2009, quotes Peter Cheese,
managing director of Accentures talent and organization practices, He warns: If you have to check
up on employees all the time, then you probably have bigger issues than just productivity (qtd. in
Big Brother Bosses).
The reality is that monitoring can cause serious effects on employees both emotionally and
physically. Monitoring affects employees self-esteem and confidence and causes complacency (do
just what the company asks for), unnecessary stress, anxiety, paranoia, carpel tunnel syndrome, and
nerve disorders. Research that supports this statement includes:
a study by Grant and Higgins (1991), 1,500 service workers were questioned on the
monitoring practices of their employers, and 75 percent believed their work quality
had suffered due to electronic monitoring [Grant and Higgins, 1991]. Some studies
have linked anxiety, depression, and nervous disorders to the stress induced by
workplace monitoring. Those who are monitored may be constantly apprehensive
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and inhibited due to the constant presence of an unseen audience (Fairweather,


1999). . . . Some employees have even compared electronic monitoring to working
as a slave and being whipped, not in our bodies but in our minds. One data processor
felt her work life was intolerable because her screen periodically flashed. Youre not
working as fast as the person next to you [Nussbaum, 1992]. (qtd. in Ariss,
Nykodym, and Cole-Laramore 23-24)
Another way of categorizing how people respond to monitoring is based on culture. While
many of us have knowledge about the different country-based cultures in the world today, Alders
research references E. J. Wallachs organizational cultures, such as the United States having a
innovative culture (an environment that allows more personal freedom and less structured work
procedures) compared to Japans supportive culture (family-type structure) (Alder 329). Alders
research is based on the model that:
Wallach (1983). . . . [i]dentified and clearly defined three separate, measureable
organizational cultures; bureaucractic, innovative, and supportive. . . . Innovative
organizations provide workers with challenges and stimulation. These environments,
however, also tend to be associated with high levels of worker stress and burnout. . . .
The supportive companys environment is fair, equal, safe, social, encouraging,
relationship oriented, collaborative, and a giver of personal freedom. It attempts to
base its style on humanistic principles. . . . Bureaucratic companies have clear lines of
authority [hierarchical], structured, regulated, and procedural. . . . A bureaucratic
culture has a nonsignificant negative association with satisfaction and involvement.
Thus, it appears as though Wallachs framework is a useful instrument for assessing
cultures impact on employee attitudes and behaviors. . . . Hood and Koberg (1989)
found that both innovative and supportive cultures were positively associated with
satisfaction and involvement and negatively associated with the propensity to leave
the organization. (qtd. in Alder 328-329)
While the cost of monitoring software is becoming more affordable for organizations of all
sizes, companies should approach using it with caution. J. H. Foegen, a professor of business at
Winona State University, writes that technology should not be considered the end all solution.
Foegon points out that management skills and logical thinking cannot be replaced by technology; it
should be used primarily as a tool to help managers be more effective. Foegon also states that:
One dark side of technology . . . . [i]s the psychological effect of electronic
monitoring. One author wrote, New technology is enabling management to monitor
a worker every second of the daycounting key strokes and average work time, for
each specific job function. . . . Many systems technicians now a carry a handheld
computer with an employee control software program. Members from one major
union have complained about the pressure of meeting average-work-time quotas, the
fear of being observed and the resulting stress, and the indignity of undercover
monitoring. The Communications Workers of America has for years pushed for
legislative and collective bargaining restrictions on monitoring. One operatormember in Texas got to the heart of the matter: Absolutely nothing is secret or
sacred during the seven and one-half hours you are plugged into that computer. (qtd.
in Foegen 45)

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In addition, Dean Elmuti and Henry Davis, authors of Not Worth the Bad Will published in
Industrial Management (2010), stated that:
Studies have shown time and time again that employees who are monitored have a
decreased productivity rate. . . . Employee monitoring does not increase productivity
when employees know they are being monitored. . . . One suggestion per Jack
Cooper, former chief information officer at Bristol-Myers Squibb Co., and now
president of JMCooper and Associates, is to monitor only those elements of
employee behavior that have a substantial effect on profitability. He states that, If it
doesnt have to do with the employees day-to-day work, it shouldnt be monitored.
Conrad Cross, chief information officer for the city of Orlando, says that,
Employees are less likely to complain if they have some level of control over the
monitoring, even if its only the freedom to check their own data. If they see the
system as a way of helping them to do their job, then they will feel less that it is a
way for management to spy on them. Richard Hunter, a privacy analyst at Gartner,
Inc., states The point of the technology is to help employees to be more productive,
not to make them paranoid. (qtd. in Elmuti and Davis 5)
What is legal today might not be legal tomorrow because our legal system is having trouble
keeping up with and interpreting the fast changing world of technology. EPM laws are in their
infancy and are still being developed, analyzed, and interpreted by the U.S. judicial system (Wen and
Gershuny 169). U.S. courts frequently struggle with the following:
the best workplace policy, with respect to monitoring, [which] needs to consider the
value of creating a pleasant working environment as well as what is legally
defensible. . . . In the early years, employee cases challenging monitoring under the
established common law tort known as invasion of privacy, have been
extraordinarily favorable to employers. Court decisions have supported employer
monitoring of employees email [24]. Courts have even allowed the use of video
cameras in employee changing rooms when the employers objective was to prevent
theft. Despite these favorable decisions. . . . gaps exist between the capability of the
employer to monitor and the factual scenarios of the cases brought to court. For
example, although monitoring employee website visits is a common practice, only a
few cases have currently challenged its legitimacy [18]. . . . In 1986, Congress
updated the 1968 Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act with the Electronic
Communications Privacy Act (ECPA). The courts and legislators are finding these
statutes dense and confusing. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals considers this a
complex, often convoluted, area of the law. This distinguished court apparently
found the act so challenging that in an unusual move, it withdrew its original opinion
in one case and reversed itself [16]. Proposals for revising the act abound [15]. (qtd.
in Wen and Gershuny 169)
To achieve a balance or win-win perspective on monitoring requires employers and the
employees to act responsibly toward one another. Employees need to remain focused on their work
and minimize personal use of company property. Employers should develop a policy (involving the
employees in the process, if possible) that applies to everyone in the company, in writing, and openly
discuss with all employees to clarify and avoid misinterpretations. Alder agrues that consistent with
research on organizational justice and participative decision making. . . . monitoring systems will be
perceived as more fair if the monitored employees are involved in the design and implementation of
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the system (Alge, in press; Ambrose & Alder, 2000: DeTienne & Abbottt, 1993) (qtd. in Alder 10).
Alder suggests that employers and employees should collaboratively create a workplace monitoring
policy to establish common goals that may relieve stressful issues. One way is for management to
explain why the company feels they need a monitoring policy, and then allow the workers to voice
their opinions and offer constructive suggestions to make the policy effective but unobtrusive. This
method establishes a buy-in to a mutually agreed on policy that both the employer and the employees
accept. In some cases, loyal employees fully embrace having a policy, secretly hoping that
employees who previously abused company privileges will be held accountable for their actions.
Beyond being responsible there are legal issues that concern both employers and employees
regarding the use of electronic monitoring. Dennis R. Nolan, from the University of South Carolina,
Columbia, addressed the need for both the employee (to self-monitor personal use of the Internet at
work) and the employer (to avoid overuse of monitoring technology that would cause unnecessary
stress to employees) to not overstep ethical and responsible boundaries. Nolan notes that there is a
fine line between privacy and profitability when analyzing the reasons for workplace monitoring,
noting that:
Employers and employees alike can and should act to minimize the intrusions,
employees by avoiding questionable use of employer-provided equipment and
systems, and employers by adopting reasonable rather than draconian computer and
communications policies. The temptation is great for employers to overreach:
avoiding that temptation may well be a bigger challenge than the possibility of
employees misconduct. (qtd. in Nolan 229)
Jeffrey M. Stanton, PhD and Kathryn R. Stam, PhD, worked on a four-year research project
that suggests the need for a balanced approach to workplace monitoring; one that protects the
employers assets and respects the employees privacy and value to the company. One significant
finding was that organizations simply do not devote the time necessary to develop and maintain an
up-to-date monitoring policy. Stanton and Stam found:
consistently among managers, information technology professionals, and
employees alike: In many organizations, policies are frequently nonexistent and, in
those cases where they have been written down, are frequently not disseminated,
enforced, or updated. . . . [I]t should be evident that policies are largely a
management construct, presumably developed in service of positively influencing
behavior throughout the organization. . . . an organizational policy is documentation
concerning right behavior, where rightness is determined on the basis of the
organizations mission and values. . . . while the concept of policy as a behavioral
tool was not foreign, the idea that policies needed to contain motivational
mechanisms was. (qtd. in Stanton and Stam 236-237)
To date, according to Apama Nancherla, Only Delaware and Connecticut require companies
to inform employees about monitoring activity. Interestingly enough, the vast majority of employers
notified workers that monitoring is practiced, though their methods of notification are not failsafe.
Elmuti and Davis stated, If the employers are going to monitor employees, they need to
have a policy explaining what monitoring will take place and get employee consent. If the employee
consents to the policy, the expectation of privacy is gone, and the legal liability for the employer is
reduced (30).
Manny Avramidis, senior vice president of global human resources at AMA, suggests that
Surveillance policies are drafted in the companys best interest, but it is HRs responsibility during
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onboarding to give specific scenarios to employees to make these policies clear, he says. . . . Seventy
percent of organizations informed employees via an employee handbook; 40 percent relied on email
notices; 35 percent used written notices; 32 percent used Intranet postings; and 27 percent
incorporated it into on-site trainingthe recommended method of increasing compliance (qtd. in
Nancherla).
Conclusion
U.S. companies have and always will continue to look for ways to produce more with less
overhead expense and employees, in order to price their product attractively to the consumer. Over
the past 20-plus years, monitoring has swung from counting assembly line products in factories to the
office environment collecting employee data on the use of time in the office and on equipment such
as keystrokes, and company versus personal use of computers, the Internet, emails, and telephones.
The Economist (2009) article Big Brother Bosses presented findings from Gartner Research (a
consultancy and leader in the monitoring software market) about the increase in security monitoring
software from 2008 to 2009. Based on Gartners research, networking forensic software is the
fastest-growing technology and Gartner found that spending on security software rose by 18.6
percent to $13.5 billion in 2008 . . . The market for security information, . . . which can be used to
mine emails for keywords and security breaches, grew by 50 percent. It is alarming to see, that
within one year, there was a 50 percent increase in the use of employee monitoring software. Is all
this monitoring necessary when, studies show that while monitoring may produce some positive
short-term results on productivity, the long-term negative effect on the workplace deteriorates the
relationships between management and workers and causes unnecessary stress, and emotional and
physical health problems for employees? A manager with good leadership skills doesnt need to use
electronic monitoring; a manager can increase company loyalty and productivity by respecting
employees and acknowledging their contributions. As an employee who works in a monitored
environment, I feel anxious, nervous, and time pressured to complete projects on schedule while
maintaining billable hour standards, and, at times, the quality of the final product does suffer due to
insufficient time allocation. An example of this is when gathering the required information for a
project it takes an inordinate amount of time forcing quality control measures, such as proofing, to be
skipped in order to meet a firm deadline.
The majority of the quantitative information written about EPM weighs heavily in favor of
businesses: companies protecting themselves from information leaks, non-company related internet
usage that reduces employee productivity, increases in a companys risk of network crippling viruses,
and breachs that threaten confidential information. In contrast, few reports have quantified the
emotional and physical effects on employees or offered suggestions to help relieve or reduce the
stress-related symptoms. Further study is needed to determine the long-term health ramifications for
employees managed using electronic performance monitoring.

Works Cited
Alder, G. Stoney. Employee reaction to electronic performance monitoring: A consequence of
organizational culture. The Journal of High Technology Management Research 12 (2001):
323-342. Pergamon. Web. 2 Feb. 2010.
AMA Press Room. 2007 Electronic Monitoring & Surveillance Survey. American Management
Association and The ePolicy Institute. Press release. Web. 28 Feb. 2008.

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Ariss, Sony, Nick Nykodym, and Aimee A. Cole-Laramore. Trust and Technology in the Virtual
Organization. SAM Advanced Management Journal 67.4 (2002): 22-25. Business Source
Elite. EBSCO. Web. 2 Feb. 2010.
Big Brother Bosses. Economist 392.8648 (2009): 71-72. Business Source Elite. EBSCO. Web. 2
Feb. 2010.
Elmuti, Dean, and Henry H. Davis. Not Worth the Bad Will. Industrial Management 48.6 (2006):
26-30. Business Source Elite. EBSCO. Web. 6 Feb. 2010.
Foegen, J. H. A Devils Advocate Approach to Technology. Business Horizons Nov.-Dec. (1988):
43-46. Print.
Harpers Index. Harpers Magazine. Jan. 2010. Print. Gartner (Egham, England).
Internet Center for Management and Business Administration, Inc. Theory X and Theory Y.
NetMBA Business Knowledge Center. Web. 2007. 6 Feb. 2010.
Mishra, Jitendra M. and Suzanne M. Crampton. Employee monitoring: privacy in the workplace?
SAM Advanced Management Journal 63 (1998). Web. 6 Feb. 2010.
Nancherla, Apama. Surveillance: Increases in Workplace. T&D 62.5 (2008): 12 Business Source
Elite. EBSCO. Web. 6 Feb. 2010.
Nolan, Dennis R. Privacy and Profitability in the Technological Workplace. Journal of Labor
Research 24.2 (2003): 207-232. Business Source Elite. EBSCO. Web. 6 Feb. 2010.
Stanton, Jeffrey M. and Kathryn R. Stam. The Visible Employee: Using workplace monitoring and
surveillance to protect information assetswithout compromising employee privacy or
trust. Medford: Information Today, Inc. 2006. Print.
Wen, H. Joseph, and Pamela Gershuny. Computer-based monitoring in the American workplace:
Surveillance technologies and legal challenges. Human Systems Management 24 (2005):
165-173. Print.
Workplace Privacy and Employee Monitoring. Privacy Rights Clearinghouse 1-7. Web. Dec.
2009. 6 Feb. 2010.

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Supremacy: The People and Institutions That Strip Gertrude of Her Power in William Shakespeares
Hamlet and John Updikes Gertrude and Claudius
by Alana Shuma
(English 1102)

od saw both man and woman as very good in the Book of Genesis. It is man, not God, as
stated by Timothy. In his Book 1, chapter 2, verse 10-11, Timothy believes that a woman
should be quiet and respectful. I give no permission for a woman to teach or to have
authority over a man (The New Jerusalem Bible). William Shakespeares Gertrude lacks power in
her life, which spirals out of control until her death in the final scene in Hamlet. In a prequel to
Hamlet, John Updike begins the story of Gerutha [Gertrude] in Gertrude and Claudius as a teenager
controlled by her father in her betrothal to Horwendil [King Hamlet]. As Eugene Wright observes,
Shakespeares view of humanity is not always pleasant, but it is accurate. Shakespeare and Updike
provide pointed insights into the difficulties women faced during the medieval period. Although
Gertrude is a member of the royal family, the boundaries laid out by the Christian Church and the
men in the royal court define Gertrudes life. Gertrude may appear to permit herself to be a
controlled and weak woman; however, it is her insignificant societal status that does not permit her
any power to control her destiny.
Gerutha begins her submissive role as a sixteen year old who does not want to marry a man
she does not love and is more than ten years her senior. King Rorik, her father, reminds Gerutha that
To disobey the King is treason (Updike 3). Gerutha knows that even as the Princess of Denmark
she has no more rights than the peasant on the street when it comes to the orders of the King. As
Laurence Mazzeno notes, as the only child of King Rorik, Gerutha is stifled within the confines of
society to which women are relegated. Gerutha lost her mother at the age of three so she does not
have a woman in the royal court that will stand up to King Rorik for her. Geruthas submission to
her marriage with Horwendil comes with her belief that she gained for herself a reputation for
realism, for reasonablenessA good woman lay in the bed others had made for her and walked in
the shoes other had cobbled (Updike 27).
Geruthas feelings about religion and taking communion in Elsinores chapel as a young girl
are made known in this Updike passage: Being in the chapel frightened her, as if her young body
were a sin, to be avenged some day, pierced from underneath (13). Updike continues, even as she
sipped the rasping wine the caustic blood of Christ, from the jewel-beknobbed chalicethe fusty
smells made her feel accused; her natural warmth felt chastened (13). The Christian Church uses
wine in a chalice to symbolize the blood of Jesus Christ. As a practicing Christian, Gerutha was
required to drink from the chalice as part of the sacrament of communion where the Christian Church
then recognizes that all of her sins have been forgiven. Shakespeares portrayal of Gertrudes adult
life exposes her sin against the Christian Church as her eventual marriage to her brother-in-law,
Claudius. Although Gertrude takes communion, she never receives forgiveness for her sin from
Hamlet or the Christian Church and dies, ironically, when she drinks from a chalice containing
poison filled by Claudius, the very individual who caused her sin in the first place. The paradox in
Gertrudes death is, as Mazzeno notes, She is a free thinker, able to criticize both the pagan rites
with which she is familiar and the Christian beliefs that have become accepted doctrine in Denmark.
As much as Gerutha does not accept Christian doctrine, she is forced to participate in Christian rites
and beliefs. It was the male doctrine of the Christian Church that condemned her marriage to
Claudius, and it was King Rorik who forced Christian beliefs on her. Gerutha does not seem to
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question whether there is a God; her actions later in life are condemned by a society that has confined
her, never allowing her to choose her beliefs.
The marriage of Gerutha was a matter of state, not happiness for her. Horwendil had to
prove his worthiness to King Rorik which he accomplished through battles and seem[ed] to believe
it is his right to take to bed young women from groups he has conquered (Mazzeno). At the tender
age of seventeen Gerutha marries Horwendil and laments the night before her marriage that once she
is married she must don the wifes concealing coif in public (Updike 20). Not only are Geruthas
inner feelings squelched, but her outward appearance is greatly changed once she becomes a married
woman. Gerutha is swept away from the only home and family she knows after her wedding
reception to Horwendils home for a wedding night that disappoints her due to his excess of alcohol.
Once the marriage is consummated and made known to the people of Denmark, Gerutha faces the
realization that Her virginity was a matter of state, for there was little doubt that Horwendil would
be the next king, and her son the next after that, if God were kind. Denmark had become a province
of her body (Updike 26). Marriage for Gerutha was not a matter of having a husband who offered
her a loving relationship and happiness for the rest of her life, marriage was another institution where
Geruthas womanhood was valued only if she could produce an heir to the throne.
Gerutha continues her role as a dutiful wife and gives birth to her only son, Amleth [Hamlet].
Once Gerutha gives birth and the child is named by Horwendil, she expresses the opinion she had
hoped to have the infant named Rorik, thus honoring her father and planting a seed of prospective
rule in the child. Horwendil chose to honor himself, though obliquely (Updike 34). Gerutha is now
Queen of Denmark and her husband, who would not be king without his marriage to her, does not
care about her opinion or honoring her family. As a mother, Gerutha feels that as a young child
Amleth mocks me, even when he apes respect. Not yet six and he knows that women neednt be
listened to (Updike 37). Raising a child is difficult, especially for a mother isolated and not
supported by her husband. Gerutha, although shunned by her son and husband, loves Amleth.
Gerutha is left by Horwendil while he rules Denmark and Amleth when he is sent to Wittenberg to
attend school. Her usefulness to Horwendil is finished now that she has birthed a son. Amleth is
removed from his mothers care once he no longer requires breast feeding. This removal of a son
from his mother is the beginning of the heartbreak of Hamlet since this tragedy deals with death and
sex and with the psychological and social tensions arriving from these basic facts of life (Boyce
236).
After Gertrudes marriage to Claudius, Hamlet arrives at Elsinore wearing all black.
Gertrude encourages him, Good Hamlet, cast thy knighted color off,/And let thine eye look like a
friend on Denmark (Shakespeare 1331). By wearing black, Hamlet is able to outwardly express his
grief for his father and forced to retreat from [the public domain] into some area not controlled by
Claudius: the privacy of his own subjectivity (Mangan 124). Whereas Hamlet is allowed,
although not happily by the royal court, to grieve publicly, Gertrude has not been allowed any
significant time to mourn the loss of her husband. Although Hamlet is a grown man, Gertrude
continues to worry about her son when she asks him, Let not thy mother lose her prayers, Hamlet,/I
pray thee stay with us, go not to Wittenberg (Shakespeare 1332). Gertrude has suffered the tragic
death of her husband and recently remarried. She gives the impression of wanting her son near her as
a way for both of them to grieve and begin the healing process. As Sharon Ouditt notes, She is not a
whore, she is a good mother who made a mistake in marrying Claudius (not much perspicacity there)
and who has been unfortunately branded ever since (59). Gertrude has been told her entire life that
she is to do what is best for Denmark and to follow the rules of the Christian Church. Unfortunately,
her one act of marrying Claudius; an act she is led to believe is best for Denmark, ends up costing her
the strained relationship with her son as well as being outcast by the Christian Church.
Gerutha grew up with Corambis [Polonius] as a trusted member of her fathers court.
Without a mother, Corambis was a person she felt was a trusted friend. It was during her time of
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loneliness she went to Corambis to help her find shelter outside of Elsinore to meet Feng [Claudius].
When she first approaches Corambis, [i]t irritated her, even, to be at the mercy of her fathers and
husbands servant, a royal henchman, who in his habitual caution was making her beg unduly for a
very modest favor (Updike 99). Gerutha knows she is putting her life in jeopardy by trusting
Corambis and even more so by secretly meeting Feng; however, she feels she is dying inside the
castle. Gerutha is not innocent: she knows she is cheating on her husband. Despite her actions, she
feels constrained by the men in control when she laments, I confess this drawback: for one in my
position, to keep a secret from the King is treason, the most capital of crimes and although she
confesses her sin to Corambis the old politician would not let her off so cheaply (Updike 101).
Gerutha is risking her life and is completely in debt to Corambis for not only speaking to him of her
desire, but in having him help her carry out the plan. Gerutha knows that Horwendil can have any
mistress he wants, but she is left to sit in the castle and wait for him to come to her.
Gerutha resigns her life as appraised through this inward eye had been a stone passageway
with many windows but not one portal leading out. Horwendil and Amleth were the twin proprietary
guards of this passageway and heavily barred death was its end (Updike 56). As a wife and mother,
Gerutha spends her time alone becoming a middle aged woman who enjoys the company of her
brother-in-law, Feng, where she could have enjoyed a balance of power in this relationship. Even
after Gertrude marries Claudius, she continues to be submissive to him when Claudius orders her,
Sweet Gertrude, leave us too and Gertrude replies, I shall obey you (Shakespeare 1364).
Gertrudes resignation of her station in life does not seem to change with her age. As Ouditt
observes: it is as well to remember that feminism is a living, political practice with a range of goals.
It constantly questions its own aims, blindnesses, methods and assumptions from a number of
perspectives (57). As much as Gertrude might have wanted to change the balance of power in her
life with her second marriage, she continues her role as an obedient wife and mother.
Claudius declares to the court, Fortinbras,/Holding a weak supposal of our worth/Our
state to be disjoint and out of frame (Shakespeare 1330). After the coronation, Claudius requires the
members of the royal court to alter their names to a more Latin version. This change is a way for
Claudius, himself, to turn over a new leaf and establish himself as the new king who, in fact, creates
the tragic end of the entire court. Having Gerutha change her name to Gertrude was a way for
Claudius to have his Queen as a different woman than his brother had. As Wright observes in his
essay about several of Shakespeares plays, The great tragedies and dark comedies written during
this period analyze the most difficult problems concerning humankind, the cosmos, and human
beings relationship with the cosmos. What Claudius did not count on was that just because a
person changes his or her name, it does not change the person inside. As noted by Harry Levin,
Claudius himself is unremittingly conscious of the distinction between the exterior and the inward
man (52). Gertrude has changed her name because Claudius told her to do so to fit in with the new
court, but all of the problems surrounding her have not changed.
As Ouditt writes, This reading of Gertrude as a solicitous matriarch, her heart cleft in
twain by her equal loyalties to her son and to her husband, releases her from the female stereotype of
lascivious whore. She continues, even if only to place her uncomfortably close to its dumb and
vulnerable counterpart, characterized by unreflective passivity (60). Gertrudes role as Queen in the
royal court, much less society, during the Dark Ages was a place of class rather than decision maker.
She was seen as property to be used and discarded if necessary. The choices she made were for selfpreservation in an era when wars were violent, kingdoms overthrown and women were not cared for
because of their sex. Submission became a way of life for Gertrude to all the men in her life which
took away her ability to have any power over her life.

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Works Cited
Boyce, Charles. Hamlet. Shakespeare A to Z The Essential Reference to His Plays, His Poems, His
Life and Times, and More. New York: Facts on File, 1990. 231-241. Print.
Levin, Harry. Interrogation, Doubt, Irony: Thesis, Antithesis, Synthesis. Modern Critical Views
William Shakespeare The Tragedies. Ed. Harold Bloom. New York: Chelsea House
Publishers, 1985. 51-59. Print.
Mangan, Michael. A Preface To Shakespeares Tragedies. New York: Longman, Inc., 1991. Print.
Mazzeno, Laurence W. Gertrude and Claudius. MagillOnLiterature Plus. Web. 25 Apr. 2010.
Ouditt, Sharon. Explaining Womans Frailty: Feminist Readings of Gertrude. Ed. Peter J. Smith
and Nigel Wood. N.p.: Open University Press, 1996. 83-107. Rpt. in Shakespearean
Criticism. Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeares Plays and Poetry, from the
1st Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations. Ed. Michelle Lee. Vol. 55. Detroit: Gale,
2000. 56-68. Print.
Shakespeare, William. Hamlet. The Norton Introduction to Literature Shorter 9th ed. Eds. Alison
Booth, J. Paul Hunter, and Kelly J. Mays. New York: W. W. Norton & Co., Inc., 2006.
1325-1418. Print.
The New Jerusalem Bible. Ed. Henry Wansbrough. New York: Doubleday, 1985. Print.
Updike, John. Gertrude and Claudius. New York: Random House, Inc., 2000. Print.
Wright, Eugene P. "Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama." MagillOnLiterature Plus. Web. 8 Apr. 2010.

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Examination of Human Skeletal Remains and Artifacts From el-Qantir, Egypt


by Emily Stephen
(Honors Biology 1152)

ABSTRACT
uring a recent excavation of a common grave on the outskirts of el-Qantir, Egypt, a human
skeleton, mummified cat and vase from the First Intermediate Period of the Eleventh
Dynasty were discovered. Based on similar findings in the surrounding area, the human
skeleton was surmised to be a mummy, decomposing because of water from a nearby irrigation
system. Carbon dating concluded the archaeological ages of all items to be around 4060 years old.
Egyptian history determined the cultural aspects of the burial, the human skeletons middle
socioeconomic class, the religious function of the cat, and the humans natural cause of death. The
skeletal remains are those of a male between the ages of 17 and 25. The evidence and conclusions
gathered in this study prove useful towards a higher understanding of the life and culture during the
First Intermediate Period of ancient Egypt where there is a deficit of recorded history.

INTRODUCTION
The ancient Egyptians created one of the first and longest prospering civilizations in recorded
history. Egypt ruled the areas of northern Africa and the Mediterranean from around 4000 B.C. to 31
B.C. (Shaw 2002). It was characterized by kingdoms and dynasties where innovations, large cities
and massive architectures were built, including the pyramids which were used for tombs (Rice 2003).
At the close of the Old Kingdom and beginning of the First Intermediate Period, specialized tombs
were built specifically for the burial for those of high social status (Assmann 2002). These tombs are
literally the foundation of Egyptian culture in which the afterlife was treated with great importance
(Shaw 2002). In order to successfully venture to the afterlife, ancient Egyptians believed that the
body had to be in pristine condition, and therefore all class members who could afford it went
through the extensive process of mummification (Dodson 1971). Many had tombs and coffins, but
those that could not afford tombs would be buried in the ground (Assmann 2002). Shaw (2002)
states that animals were used in traditional burial because of religious reasons and many were buried
with treasured possessions for use in the afterlife.
The excavation site in a common grave in the outskirts of el-Qantir, Egypt, located on the
eastern Nile Delta where a human skeleton, mummified cat and vase were recently discovered could
potentially be from the First Intermediate Period. The objectives of this study was to determine the
archeological age of the human skeletal remains, mummified cat, and vase, the artifacts relationship
with each other, gender, age of death, socioeconomic class and cause of death of the human skeletal
remains. By determining this, possible information concerning living conditions and culture of the
ancient people would further complete the understanding of history.
METHODS
The archeological ages of the human skeleton, mummified cat, and vase was determined
using carbon-14 dating. Ten samples were taken from each artifact. Two-tailed t-tests were used by
to examine if the skeletal remains were significantly different in age from the mummified cat and
vase. Significance was determine at P<0.05. Gender of the human skeletal remains was determined
from sexually dimorphic regions. Age of death of the skeletal remains was estimated by bone size as
well as development and quality of teeth. The socioeconomic status of the mummy and cause of
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death were determined through study of ancient Egyptian culture and examination of the status of the
skeletal remains.
RESULTS
Table 1 summarizes the mean archeological ages and standard error of the human skeletal
remains, mummified cat, and vase as determined from carbon-14 dating. The human skeletal
remains dated approximately to the same age as the mummified cat (t = 0.304; P = 0.765; df = 18),
but both the human skeletal remains and mummified cat differed significantly in age from the vase
(t=2.416; P = 0.027; df = 18). The similarity in age between the human skeletal remains and
mummified cat is evidence that both objects were associated with one another at the time of burial.
A difference in age of 20 years may indicate that the vase may have been a possession of the
individual, albeit just in the afterlife.
Gender of the skeletal remains was determined male through sexually dimorphic
observations. The pelvis was narrow, the sub-pubic angle was v-shaped with a lack of a developed
ventral arc, the sub-pubic concavity was absent, the pelvic brim was a narrow and heart-shaped, a
pelvic ratio of less than one, and the overall size robust, are all significant indicators that the skeletal
remains are male (Mays 1998).
The presence of third molars with little wear indicates a minimal age of 17 to 25 (Isan
1989). The skeletons overall large, developed bones signify a mature male skeleton that has
completed growth or is nearing completion. Therefore, the age was estimated to be between ages of
17 and 25. Due to the undamaged skeleton, the cause of a relatively early death is unknown but can
possibly be due to infection or diseases prevalent during the First Intermediate Period of the Eleventh
Dynasty. The socioeconomic class of the skeleton can be inferred to be that of the middle class
because of its place and condition of burial, as well as the items buried with the remains.
DISCUSSION
The skeletal remains and artifacts discovered in el-Qantir, Egypt, represent a time period of
the Eleventh Dynasty in the First Intermediate Period from 2150-2040 B.C. (Grimal 1994). Rice
(2003) states the First Intermediate Period was one of constant conflict, change, and increased trade.
These conflicts, Mertz (2007) says, resulted in a decline in recorded history. Young age and an
absence of bone injury to the skeletal remains indicate a potential cause of death by disease or
infection. The spread of disease heightened with states of conflict, increased trade and traveling
people in conjunction with the high density in which the ancient Egyptian people lived. Prevalent
diseases during the time were malaria, smallpox, measles, cholera and schistosomiasis (Grimal
1994). Additionally, the close proximity to the Nile River provided a fertile breeding ground for
parasitic organisms which could cause infection.
The human skeletal remains are of an Egyptian male of middle socioeconomic class. The
socioeconomic class was indicated by an absence of a sarcophagus or coffin, characteristic of people
of high class, location in a common grave with great quality of skeletal preservation, indicating a
greater fortune than low socioeconomic class, and presence of a mummified animal (Dodson 1971).
The mummified cat and skeleton were buried approximately at the same time. This is indicative of
the religious views that the ancient Egyptians held for certain animals, in which all of their gods were
associated with an animal and those that could afford it would bring them along in the afterlife
(Mertz 2007). Additionally, belongings in life, such as the vase, were also buried with individuals
for success in the afterlife. Those of high socioeconomic class were traditionally buried in the city,
whereas those of lower status found graves in less occupied places (Richards 2002). El-Qantir was a
major city only after the Nineteenth Dynasty due to its royal establishment and access to trade, but
has no previous documented traces of habitation (Kemp 2006). Thus, any evidence of habitation
enriches historical understanding of the era.
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Literatures Cited
Assmann, J. 2002. The Mind of Egypt. Metropolitan Books, New York, NY.
Dodson, A. 2008. The Tomb in Ancient Egypt: Royal and Private Sepulchres from the Early
Dynastic Period to the Romans. Thames and Hudson, London, UK.
Grimal, N. 1994. A History of Ancient Egypt. MA: Blackwell, Cambridge, MA.
Isan, M. Y. 1989. Age Markers in the Human Skeleton. Charles C. Thomas, Springfield, IL.
Kemp, B. J. 2006. Ancient Egypt: Anatomy of a Civilization. Routeledge, New York, NY.
Mays, S. 1998. The Archaeology of Human Bones. Routledge, New York, NY.
Mertz, B. 2007. Temples, Tombs and Hieroglyphs: A Popular History of Ancient Egypt. William
Morrow, New York, NY.
Rice, M. 2003. Egypts Making: The Origins of Ancient Egypt 5000-2000 BC. Routledge, London,
UK.
Richards, J. 2002. Time and Memory in Ancient Egyptian Cemeteries. Expedition. 44:16-25.
Shaw, I. (Ed.). (2002). The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt. New York: Oxford University Press,
New York, NY.

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Table 1. Summary (mean + standard error) of artifact ages according to mean of carbon dating of
object. All n = 10.
Artifact

Age Mean + Standard Error (years)

Human skeletal remains

4061 + 6

Mummified cat

4058 + 7

Vase

4042 + 4

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The Road Often Taken


by Lauren Stull
(English 1102)

The Road Not Taken


Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then took the other, as just as fair,
And perhaps having the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,
And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.
Robert Frost

obert Frosts poem The Road Not Taken epitomizes nonconformity in its finest form:
independent thinking and reasoning. His first description of two roads diverged in a yellow
wood (1) symbolizes the choice the traveler in his poem must make. Frosts poem leaves no
indication of which path was chosen, and while it remains unknown if the narrator regrets taking the
road less traveled by or if his decision had negative repercussions, it is quite clear that in doing so it
has made all the difference (20). There have been many stories and poems written about rebellion,
conformity, obedience, and compliance. These stories can be found in almost any culture, and each
culture has its own adaptation reflecting its regions morals and beliefs. The poems The Unknown
Citizen and We Wear the Mask as well as the stories Orientation and The Bridegroom very
evidently depict how conformity often yields a uniform etiquette and instills an adequate sense of
overall satisfaction in people, but never leads to personal happiness or fulfillment.
The Unknown Citizen is a poem that drastically contrasts The Road Not Taken contentwise, yet surprisingly complements the themes of rebellion and conformity in both works. Where
Frosts poem emphasizes nonconformity, W.H. Audens The Unknown Citizen features elements
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of conformity. The unknown citizen was completely compliant with the norms of society. As the
poem indicates there was a lot of documentation on how he lived his life: Union reports, Healthcards, conduct reports, and researched studies are all mentioned throughout the piece (Auden 3-22).
None of these reports and studies found anything out of the ordinary. The narrator even states that
he held the proper opinions for the time of year; / when there was peace, he was for peace; when
there was war, he went (23-24).
It is depressing that certain people could seemingly find out everything they could ever want
to know about how this unknown citizens lived his life, but would never really know who he was
or if he was truly happy. The irony behind this poem is that the narrator uses quantitative research
the comparison of this mans lifestyle to those of other citizens to find a qualitative answer to the
question of if he was truly happy. The role conformity plays in this poem is that while the unknown
citizen completely conformed to societal standards the standards that are perceived to result in a
happy life it was unknown whether or not his life of conformity was in fact a happy one. This
implication is reinforced by the last two lines of the poem, in which the narrator writes, Was he
free? Was he happy? The question is absurd: / Had anything been wrong, we should certainly have
heard (29-30).
According to Alice Eagly, the definition of conformity consists of stating an attitude or
belief or engaging in a behavior that is consistent with that of other members of a group or with other
people in ones social environment (Eagly 263). In order to be labeled as conformity, the belief,
attitude, or behavior must indicate a change from a previously-held opinion that would have
remained held in the absence of the influence of other people (Eagly 263). Two types of conformity
are normative influence, defined as influence to conform with the positive expectations of another
and informational influence, or influence to accept information obtained from another as evidence
about reality (Eagly 264). Normative influence is most often found in manipulative behavior and the
desire to gain positive outcomes such as liking and approval and avoid negative outcomes like
rejection and personal embarrassment are why people respond to this specific type of influence.
Informational influence occurs more often when people rely on others actions and attitudes as a
valid or potentially valid source of information in regard to the nature of reality (Eagly 264). It is
often found that people feel inclined to conform to social pressures due to fear of rejection, regardless
of whether or not the individual is opposed to the behavior, attitude, or belief. Social Comparison
Theory states that our search for guidance strongly influences our self-esteem (Conformity 600).
Furthermore, our search for guidance has a major impact on our self-image. If an individual publicly
conforms, it does not necessarily mean that he or she also agrees privately, or internally. This
disagreement leads to inner conflict and unhappiness, an implied theme in The Unknown Citizen
and the main idea that fuels Paul Laurence Dunbars poem, We Wear the Mask.
In his poem, Dunbar personifies a mask that grins and lies (1), or conceals our true
emotions from our peers. He explains how people can be in pain and agony on the inside, and that
their ability to disguise their actual feelings is the debt we [people] pay to human guile (3); in other
words, it is the price we pay to artful deception in order to appear normal. The second stanza of We
Wear the Mask ironically asks readers why the rest of their peers should need to know that they are
in pain and why other people should see them in their most vulnerable state by inquiring Why
should the world be overwise / in counting all our tears and sighs? (6-7). This is Dunbars
justification as to why we wear the mask.
The final stanza of the poem continues emphasizing how people can appear calm, collected,
and even happy on their exterior regardless of the torment, misery, and woe they may feel inside:
We smile, but, O great Christ, our cries / To thee from tortured souls arise. / We sing, but oh the
clay is vile / beneath our feet, and long the mile. . . (Dunbar 10-13). The poems last two lines, . . .
let the world dream otherwise / we wear the mask! (14-15) plainly state that the rest of the world
need not concern themselves with any one individuals personal pain. This poem clearly exemplifies
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the potential inner conflict of a person forced to conform to an environment he or she morally or
ethically disagrees with, further validating that conformity does not always lead to personal
happiness or fulfillment.
Another example of conformity leading to unhappiness is the story Orientation by Daniel
Orozco, which depicts conformity differently than Frosts, Audens, and Dunbars poems. Written as
a workplace orientation monologue, Orientation starts out as a bland and boring first day on the
job tour. In the story, the company symbolizes society and a job position within the company
symbolizes an individuals role within society. The company policies represent societys rules, and
thus conforming to the companys policies resembles conforming to society. The perks and benefits
mentioned throughout the story i.e.: the comprehensive health plan (Orozco 455), the Costco
membership (456), and the generous vacation and sick leave policy (456) all symbolize the
benefits of conforming to society.
Hypothetically, these representative benefits would result in the happiness of the office
employees because they adhere to their jobs standards. This resulting happiness symbolizes the
satisfaction and fulfillment in complying with societys standards. As the story continues, however,
readers are exposed to more personal information about the office workers lives: details revealing
that the employees are far from happy, and that any regular job orientation would never include. For
example, when the narrator tells readers that office employee Barry Hacker steals other peoples food
from the office refrigerator, he also casually adds that his petty theft is an outlet for his grief
(Orozco 456), and then begins to tell a story about Hackers deceased wife. Another instance in
which more inappropriate personal details are given is when the narrator points out the restrooms; he
states that John LeFountaine occasionally uses the womens bathroom, and that his forays into the
forbidden territory of the womens room [are] simply a benign thrill, a faint blip on the dull flat line
of his life (455).
Readers also discover that there are two types of employees in this workplace. Both classes
of employee appear to conform to the assigned workplace role but in fact do not. The first type of
workers do their job effectively without their personal issues obtrusively intervening in their
everyday work life. Examples of this class of worker include Kevin Howard, the serial killer
nicknamed the Carpet Cutter (457), and Anika Bloom, the psychic who fell into a trance, stared
into her hand, and told Barry Hacker when and how his wife would die (455). The second kind of
employee is undeniably miserable because their personal problems affect their workplace roles, yet
they choose to conform nonetheless. This type includes the characters Amanda Pierce, a woman with
an autistic son and a sexually abusive husband (455), and Gwendolyn Stich, a considerate and
generous employee that has an eating disorder and is depressed because Kevin Howard the serial
killer has a secret crush on her (457). These character types potentially resemble two varieties of
people who choose to conform to societal standards regardless of whether or not doing so is in their
own personal best interests.
One of the many rules and regulations in this workplace environment is that if the office
workers do not comply with the rules, they may be let go (455). This adds to the underlying theme
of conformity because if any employee chooses not to adhere to these rules, they suffer the
consequence of losing their position in the company. The same idea is represented through an
individual choosing not to conform to societal standards and consequently being shunned from
society. All of the employees follow these rules which are meant to enforce a sense of conformity
and result in their happiness. Regardless of their compliant nature, the office workers instead find
themselves struggling through their workdays, coping with and attempting to mask their own
personal misery.
The irony behind Orientation is that to any outsider, this office workplace would appear
normal because all of its employees conform to the same standards of workplace etiquette; at first
glance the employees also appear to be happy with their work and personal lives. However, it is
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obvious through the monologue of the employee directing the orientation that all of the office
employees are either miserable or disturbed. This story adds to the idea that Dunbars We Wear the
Mask is formed around: the recurrent theme that conforming does not yield happiness and that those
who conform and are still in agony suffer silently.
Ha Jins The Bridegroom is set in China, and contrasts the idea of people suffering silently
due to submission to authority. Written in 1999 (Jin 413) when homosexuality was banned by the
Chinese government the storys main characters Beina and Huang Baowen refuse to succumb to the
pressures of conformity by accepting each other for who they truly are. Despite the discrimination
and persecution that Chinese gays faced during the time the story is set, Beina accepts Huang as her
husband regardless of his homosexuality, and Huang accepts and cares for Beina as his wife despite
his attraction to men. An interesting fact that contributes to the hypocrisy of The Bridegroom is
that homosexuality was once widely accepted throughout the Chinese culture (Elegant). What readers
may find even more intriguing is that homosexuality is once again becoming more acceptable in
Chinas society (Elegant).
Historically, Chinese society was relaxed about homosexuality, which was tolerated so long
as it didnt interfere with the Confucian duty to raise a family, writes Simon Elegant in an article for
Time Magazine (Elegant). Elegant also writes that although an imperial decree banned
homosexuality in 1740 (probably under the influence of Christian missionaries), it was the
Communists who first drove gays and lesbians underground (Elegant). According to The
Encyclopedia of Lesbian and Gay Histories and Cultures, the reasons why China shifted from a
relative tolerance of homosexuality to open hostility are complex and not yet completely
understood (China 187). The shift in perspective occurred in the twentieth century and was most
likely influenced by western cultures, as the Chinese reformers early in the century began to see any
divergence between their own society and that of the West as a sign of backwardness (187). This
source states that it was in 1949 when homosexuals were sentenced to reeducation in labor camps
as punishment for their sexual preference and were penalized through anal rape and other forms of
abusive behavior that openly gay life in China came swiftly to an end (187).
More recently, the Chinese police have been preoccupied with the rising crime rate in China,
and generally ignore the countrys gay and lesbian citizens (China 187). Chinas policy on
homosexuality has become one of a dont ask, dont tell nature, with more populated regions such
as Beijing and other major cities carrying a similar triple-no policy: no approval, no disapproval,
no promotion (Elegant). Beijing enforced this policy in 2005 by forbidding all theaters in the city
from showing the film Brokeback Mountain (Hewitt). The message: do what you want in your
bedroom, but dont make a public issue out of it, wrote Duncan Hewitt in Newsweek last year. He
concluded his article by writing that the citys reluctance to screen the movie is yet another sign of
how nervous Beijing is about any kind of activism it cant control (Hewitt) and that homosexuals
have a long way to go until they obtain a respectable level of tolerance and acceptance from the
Chinese government (Hewitt). In 2001, homosexuality was taken off of Chinas official list of mental
illnesses (Elegant), assuring that homosexuals will not have to tolerate treatments similar to those
that Huang Baowen had to endure (Jin 407).
It is essential for Chinese homosexual activists and readers of The Bridegroom to realize
that the nonconformity, in addition to the nonviolent forms of rebellion utilized throughout the story
and the history of homosexual repression in the Chinese culture are what effectively achieved results.
Though the story does not have a happy ending Huang is ultimately sentenced to three and a half
years in jail for committing the crime of homosexuality (Jin 412) Huang and Beinas
unconditional acceptance of each other not only shows tolerance for diversity, but also represents the
significant element of nonconformity throughout the story. This element of the story is important
because ultimately nonconformity and perseverance are what repealed the law banning sodomy in
China in 1997 (Elegant). Beina and Huangs acceptance of each other for who they truly are also
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symbolizes the hope of unconditional acceptance and understanding for people in a culture where
there is none. This hope serves as an inspiration not to conform to society because it is appropriate,
but to create a culture in which people are allowed to be whom they are without having to conform to
or be judged by a general set of standards. Ideally, this level of acceptance has the potential of
becoming present in any culture or society.
The underlying moral within each of these stories and poems is that conformity is an
effective method of obtaining a uniform etiquette and adequate sense of satisfaction in a large group
of people. However, in a diverse group of individuals, conformity is not always in the best interest of
everyone. While rebellion without a cause is foolish, nonconformity for an unselfish and just cause
such as happiness and equality for a diverse group of people is acceptable, and can be just as
effective and appropriate as conformity. It is not only crucial for readers to comprehend this
significant idea behind rebellion and conformity in order to better understand the collection of poems
and stories referenced: it is also important for readers to realize because, in doing so, they become
more open-minded and knowledgeable about the world they live in.

Works Cited
Auden, W. H. The Unknown Citizen. Literature and the Writing Process. Ed. Elizabeth McMahan,
et al. 469. Print.
China. The Encyclopedia of Lesbian and Gay Histories and Cultures. Ed. John Benson, Douglas
Eisner, and George E. Haggerty. Vol. 2. New York: Garland, 2000. 184-87. Print.
Conformity, Compliance, and Obedience. Psychology: An Introduction. Ed. Jerome Kagan, Julius
Segal, and Ernest Havemann. 9th ed. Belmont: Wadsworth-Thomson, 2004. 597-603. Print.
Dunbar, Paul Laurence. We Wear the Mask. Literature and the Writing Process. Ed. Elizabeth
McMahan, et al. 593. Print.
Eagly, Alice H. Conformity. Encyclopedia of Psychology. Ed. Alan E. Kazdin, et al. 8 vols.
Oxford: Oxford UP, 2000. 263-65. Print.
Elegant, Simon. Postcard: Beijing. Time 4 Feb. 2008: 8. Academic Search Premier. Web. 22 June
2010.
Frost, Robert. The Road Not Taken. Robert Frost Collected Poems, Prose, and Plays. Comp.
Richard Poirier and Mark Richardson. New York: Library of America, 1995. 103. Print.
Hewitt, Duncan, and Melinda Liu. Chinas Bamboo Closet. Newsweek 22 June 2009: 13. Academic
Search Premier. Web. 22 June 2010.
Jin, Ha. The Bridegroom. Literature and the Writing Process. Ed. Elizabeth McMahan, et al. 40013. Print.
McMahan, Elizabeth, et al., eds. Literature and the Writing Process. 9th ed. Boston: n.p., 2007. Print.
Orozco, Daniel. Orientation. Literature and the Writing Process. Ed. Elizabeth McMahan, et al.
454-58. Print.

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Elementary-Teacher Preparation Programs


by Jennifer Wendt
(Education 1100)

hile to some degree teaching can be a natural talent, students who seek one day to be a
teacher must have some sort of preparation and education before they enter their own
classroom. Education major students are introduced to the ideas, theories and practical
application as well as direct practice and observation in the classroom through teacher preparation
courses that one must complete in order to eventually become a teacher. These programs may vary
depending on the ultimate goal of the student be it to teach preschool levels, elementary, or
secondary school, in addition to the style of the program itself. My goal in this paper is to discover
what sort of preparation programs a student goes through in order to teach at the elementary school
level, to understand how and if these programs work, and how they are evolving. Most teacher
preparation programs are divided between the college-setting (learning theory, history, and
information), and the field setting (actually observing and teaching students). However, this is by no
means the only way to organize a teacher preparation program. Some alternative programs, such as
Teach for America, focus on having students learning directly from being in a classroom. There are
also many different types of programs available, and some are more effective than others. Teacher
Education, once a subject that was rather overlooked in colleges, is now in the spotlight, in part due
to the Obama administration's plans to change the No Child Left Behind Act. In the past ten years,
groups like NCATE, or the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education have been
encouraging the teaching community to redesign teacher preparation programs because new teachers
were failing to be fully prepared for their first year in the classroom. It has also been said that
reoccurring problem in traditional college and university teaching education programs is that there is
a lack of connection between campus-based, university-based teacher education courses and field
experiences (Zeichner, 2010, para 11). On the other side of the coin, educator preparation programs
that as mentioned previously combine both college settings and field settings, have been shown to
have higher success and preparation rates. The field of educating prospective students to become
teachers has come a long way from preparing students not much older or more educated than their
future pupils as was the case in the 1900s and is still studying and experimenting to see what
programs will best prepare aspiring teachers, transforming them from student to teacher. With the
recent flood of studies and debates conducted about teacher preparation programs, it seems that the
field of education is still learning itself.
The simplest way to explain how aspiring teachers prepare for their own classroom, and in
general, what teacher preparation programs are is that there is no consensus on how to best prepare
teachers (Sadker & Zittleman, 2010, p.15). There are many different programs to prepare students to
take on the role as teachers, but the two biggest approaches are known as traditional and
alternative. Traditional programs are what most education major students go through at a college
or university. This course has students learn the theory behind teaching, then go to a separate
classroom in a local school to actually practice teaching and apply what they have learned. From
there on, students may get a bachelor's degree or master's degree in teaching, or continue their
student teaching for an additional year to obtain their teacher's license. Traditional programs are
beneficial because they give a prospective teacher a hefty knowledge of the history of teaching, how
children learn, and various methods and theories of education. Most prospective teachers graduate
from this sort of program, and traditional programs actually graduate more of their students than
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their counterpart, alternative programs (Sadker & Zittlman, 2010, p.15). Alternative programs are
more akin to apprenticeships a mechanic or electrician might go through. Rather than learn theory in
a course, in these alternative-program students are expected to learn how to teach within a working
classroom, a sort of direct approach. Support for this approach comes from the idea that traditional
programs are too theory-heavy and do not place enough importance upon the experience of studentteaching. One program like this is called Teach for America, which tend to attract students who
majored in other subjects and train them in only a few months, providing an alternative method of
certification (Nelson, 2010, para 13). Alternative programs are beneficial to students because they
give them a chance to dive into the world of teaching, to learn directly from on-the-job-experience
and to see if this really is the career for them. Neither the traditional, nor alternative approach to
teacher preparation is acknowledged to be better than the other, as they both draw supporters and
critics. While each program provides beneficial experiences and lessons for their students, they also
have their individual drawbacks and weaknesses.
While there has been a critical view placed on teacher preparation programs within the past
ten years, with the No Child Left Behind Act's renewal looming above the world of education, there
have been a massive increase in studies and debates over teacher education programs, as to whether
or not they really are effective in adequately preparing and educating aspiring teachers. Both
traditional and alternative paths of teacher education such as college universities and Teach For
America have caught their fair share of criticism. Traditional universities, whose focuses are to teach
pedagogical methods and theory while requiring prospective teachers student teach and observe at
separate school facilities, have been accused of having a major disconnect between its campus-based
and teaching-based components. Zeichner (2010) explains the common downfall of traditional
programs:
Although most university-based teacher education programs now include multiple
field experiences over the length of the program and often situate field experiences in
some type of school-university partnership, the disconnect between what students are
taught in campus courses and their opportunities for learning to enact these practices
in their school placements is often very great even within professional development
and partner schools. For example, it is very common for cooperating teachers with
whom students work during their field placement to know very little about the
specifics of the methods and foundation courses that their student teachers have
completed on campus, and the people teaching the campus courses often know very
little about the specific practices used in the [K-6] classrooms where their students
are placed. (para 11-12)
The result of this phenomena is that students do not have opportunities to apply what they
have learned in their campus course and get feedback on their use of those teaching methods. There
occurs, for lack of a better word, a disconnect between what was intended to work dually. The
college campus and the classroom become two separate worlds to the student. Therefore, what they
are learning in the college course does not really carry over to their teaching career and students, now
teachers, feel ill-prepared to teach their own classroom. With the exception of a few assignments in
methods courses that students are asked to complete in their field placements, student teachers and
their cooperating teachers are often left to work out the daily business of student teaching by
themselves with little guidance and connection to campus courses, and it is often incorrectly assumed
that good teaching practices are caught rather than taught, concludes one researcher (Zeichner,
2010, para 12-13). Alternative programs do not fare better than their traditional program
counterparts. Alternative programs such as Teach for America and city-based teaching programs have
been accused of inadequately preparing teachers because they leave out important pedagogical
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methods. Beverly L. Young, Assistant Vice Chancellor for Teacher Education and Public-School
Programs at California State University, says (as quoted by Nelson, 2010), [Alternative certification
can have] very minimum qualifications. Teachers who are trained that way can easily become
frustrated and leave the profession. While alternative programs are fast and offer a lot of inclassroom experience, they denote the importance of an understanding for the history of education, as
well as important theories and methods of education. Young even says Programs like Teach for
America that focus on subject matter and not pedagogy really shortchange the teaching profession
(as quoted in Nelson, 2010). In actuality, Greenwell's article has found that the majority of
participants in Teach for America leave teaching after just two years (as cited in Sadker & Zittleman,
2010). From these accounts, it is clear that each teacher preparation path is not perfect, and can stand
for improvement to better prepare aspiring teachers to feel secure and knowledgeable in their first
years in teaching.
Luckily, the field of teacher education is, in a way, benefiting from the harsh critiques of the
local, government, and education communities. A profound sea of change is becoming apparent.
The relatively small waves of intrusion that lapped on the shores of academe are becoming whitecapped breakers,says one writer (Goodlad, 1999, para 14). Debates are bringing about ideas for
better methods of, well, teaching teaching, and various teacher education programs across the
country are overhauling their programs to start programs better attuned to prospective teacher's needs
and what research has showed us is effective. In Arizona State, for example, education majors are
taking less education courses, and more classes on the field they intend to teach. Interestingly
enough, the law school dean is writing a civics curriculum for aspiring elementary school teachers;
university scientists have created a science program. It's a university-wide effort to make teacher
training more vigorous and effective (Nelson, 2010, para 1). With a renewed interest in making their
teacher preparation programs count by getting the entire university involved, the University of
Arizona is bringing in more education-major students and, hopefully, will have a higher success rate.
As Zeichner (2010) states that:
Two of the most in-depth national studies (Darling-Hammond, 2006; Tatto, 1996) of
teacher education in the United States have shown that carefully constructed field
experiences that are coordinated with campus courses are more influential and
effective in supporting student teaching learning than the unguided and disconnected
field experiences that have historically been dominant in American teacher education.
Fourteen years later, it seems America is finally listening, and working on developing the
connection between campus and the classroom. In part, this change is thanks to the upcoming
renewal of the No Child Left Behind act, and the changes the Obama administration is bringing. Mr.
Obama has expressed interest in reforming traditional teachers' colleges (Nelson, 2010, para 12)
and issued grants to reward colleges of education that use a combination of traditional and alternative
teacher preparation programs aspects. The University of Arizona is one of the first universities to
change, and receive that grant. Now, teachers and universities have opened small laboratory schools
where different teaching methods can be taught and practiced, to model what students can do when
they are really in an elementary classroom. At the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, the resident
teachers have created a stronger link between the campus and the classroom by hiring [K-6]
educators with evidence of a high level of competence in the classroom (Zeichner, 2010) to spend
two years working in all aspects of a teacher education program. During this two year time period,
the public school teachers participate in seminars to improve teacher leadership skills, and after the
two year residency, go back to their public schools. I had a chance to interview several university
faculty and teacher residents during the 2 years that I recently spend as the external evaluator for the
UW-Milwaukee Teachers for a New Era project, and...the faculty I whom I interviewed spoke very
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positively, said Zeichner. With bringing in elementary teachers, students also have a chance to see
the artifacts of teaching (Zeichner, 2010, para 20) from a teacher's work at elementary schools,
such as tests, projects, or even videos displaying different teaching methods. These video clips are
especially promising, because they give students a chance to see how they can incorporate
pedagogical methods into classroom teaching. Co-teaching, also known as collaborative teaching,
something that is common in elementary classrooms and usually involves general and special
education professionals collaborating in the same classroom for better results, is something that will
also be practiced in student teaching. Murawski (2002) explains:
Few teacher preparation programs provide instruction in co-teaching, and far fewer
actually model the techniques for teacher trainees. Hence, it's is not surprising that
new teachers often feel unprepared to co-teach...[Yet] when two credentialed (or at
least experienced teachers are collaberating together in one classroom, great things
can happen. Few teachers can deny that.
So, by introducing student teachers to this method of teaching early, they ensure that they will be
comfortable with a technique that can truly help their students do exponentially better than they
would with just one teacher. Alternative programs are also being redesigned-program officials are
examining Teach for America's recruiting and selecting strategies as well as making getting
certification more challenging. Teach for America will require education students to take more
classes in the liberal arts and sciences, extend student teaching to a year-long teaching from a
semester-long one, and create teacher-residency programs at elementary schools around the
state...including some on American Indian reserves (Nelson, 2010, para 17). Through more carefully
coordinated field experiences that can tie into campus coursework, and creative, supportive mentors;
students in traditional programs will lose the disconnect effect that has plagued traditional teacher
preparation programs in the past. And through increasing course requirements and student-teaching
hours, alternative program students will be fully educated and effective. With this mass redesign of
teacher preparation programs, both types of students have a better chance accomplishing the ultimate
goal of teacher education: to prepare teachers for their own classroom.
Teacher preparations programs have come a long way since the 1800s, and are evolving
increasingly fast today. As people in the field of education researched and realized that neither the
traditional nor the alternative preparation programs were a perfect path for aspiring teachers to walk
on, they brainstormed new ideas and debated to combine the aspects of both programs into a more
accommodating one. While the traditional path exercises a sort of transmission of culture the
passing on of pedagogical methods and theories that have served teachers for generations it fails to
show how to use this knowledge in the classroom, and while alternative programs give teachers a
look into the world they may one day inhabit, they fail to really give them the right tools to succeed.
Now, educators as well as the government are working to create a synthesis of the two programs, a
plan that will give prospective teachers the important theories and methods of teaching while
showing them how they can apply the things they have learned from their courses in the classroom
and making sure students get adequate time to actually experience teaching. The goal of teacher
preparation programs is to make our future teachers feel comfortable, confidant, and prepared to take
on the role of educating our future-no simple task. As Goodlaw (1999) states, Now the time has
come-it is long overdue-to launch an era of concentrated attention to teacher education. The reasons
are both practical and moral: practical because the university's very standing is at stake; moral
because it's the right thing to do.

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References
Goodlad, John I. (1999) 'Rediscovering Teacher Education': School Renewal and Educating
Educators. Change 31.5: 29. Academic OneFile. Web.
Murawski, Wendy W. (2002) 'Including Co-Teaching in a Teacher Preparation Program':A Vital
Addition. Exchange Quaterly 6.2: 113+. Academic Onefile. Web.
Nelson, Libby. (2010) 'Obama's Efforts to Improve Teacher Training Stir Old Debates.' The
Chronicle of Higher Education 56.23. Academic Onefile. Web.
Sadker, David M., Zittleman, Karen R. (2010) 'Part 1': Teachers and Students. Teachers, Schools, and
Society 9th edition. McGraw Hill. Book.
Zeichner, Ken. (2010) 'Rethinking the Connections Between Campus Courses and Field Experiences
in College and University-Based Teacher Education.' Journal of Teacher Education 61.12:+89. Academic OneFile.Web.

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Sex Discrimination in The Catbird Seat and Todays Workplace


by Amanda Woolum
(Honors English 1150)

f the American Dream is an opportunity for all, then why do people feel that women should not
be on top in the workplace? In The Catbird Seat, James Thurber leads his readers to ponder this
question as he addresses the issue of women on top in the workplace, and how the American
Dream is not be an equal opportunity for all.
In The Catbird Seat, the main character Mr. Martin does not approve of Mrs. Barrows who
happens to be the newly appointed special adviser to the president of the firm, Mr. Fitweiler
(Thurber 864). Mr. Martin claims that Ulgine Barrows stood charged with willful, blatant, and
persistent attempts to destroy the efficiency and system of F & S (865). Because of this, Mr. Martin
devises a scheme to get Mrs. Barrows fired. Even though it seems as if Mr. Martin's problem with
Mrs. Barrows lies with her personality and the fact that she had begun chipping at the cornices of
the firm's edifice and now she was swinging at the foundation stones with a pickaxe (865), the real
problem lies with the fact that she is a woman in a position of power in the workplace. This
intimidates Mr. Martin, and also makes him feel as if his American Dream could be taken away from
him by Mrs. Barrows. The discrimination of women on top in the workplace is not just a problem in
this story, but also a problem in real life.
In today's world, even with laws such as the Equal Pay Act, women are still receiving less
pay than men, have difficulties reaching higher positions in the workplace, and are discriminated
against in hiring. According to the article The Glass Ceiling, Today, nearly 60 percent of the
nation's labor force are women or minorities, yet white males still hold most of the top jobs in
corporations, labor unions, universities and other institutions(Adams). Women particularly face the
problem of the glass ceiling, meaning that they are unable to advance in their business. According to
the same article, [This] term was given currency by The Wall Street Journal in 1986 (Adams) and
has since became a term that has stirred up many issues. Woman can do more work than men in their
workplace and still not be able to advance . . . women have only 5 or 6 percent of the higher
management jobs (Adams). According to the article Women, Sexual Politics & the American
Dream, Women sometimes vastly outnumber men in higher education and as recipients of degrees,
yet do not rise to the top of corporations or law firms (Mazur). Not only are women unable to
advance in their workplace, but they also receive less pay than men. U.S. Rep. Rosa L. DeLauro
stated that, A significant wage gap is still with us, and that gap constitutes nothing less than an
ongoing assault on women's economic freedom (qtd. in Adams). How big is this wage gap exactly?
According to the article Gender Pay Gap:
In 2006 full-time female workers earned 81 percent of men's weekly earnings,
according to the latest U.S. Labor Department data...Separate U.S. Census Bureau
data put the gap at about 77 percent of men's median full-time, year-round earning.
(Billitteri)
Some people argue that the wage gap is a result of women's choices in careers or to have babies.
However, the article states that The pay gap exists even when women choose not to have children
and when they choose male-dominated fields of study and occupation (Billitteri). Evelyn F.
Murphy, president of The Wage Project, stated that, Women do not realize the enormous price that
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Parenti: <em>A Traveler from Altruria:</em> Book Analysis

they pay for gender wage discrimination because they do not see big bites taken out of their
paychecks at any one time (qtd. in Billitteri). This means that even though women are being
discriminated against, they usually do not realize it. By not coming to this realization, they are
unknowingly accepting this discrimination and letting it continue. Not only do women face this glass
ceiling, but sometimes they can not even make inside the door of the workplace due to hiring
discrimination. Some places do no hire women if they are pregnant or intend on becoming pregnant
while working there because they do not want their employees to take time off work. Others feel that
women are not capable of doing a man's job, like construction. According to the article Legal
Discrimination Against Women in Hiring, Employers [in Effort, Pennsylvania] not only can and do
refuse to hire a woman if she admits to being a mother, they can even pay her lower wages based on
this familial status if hired (Peppard). This is only one example of sex discrimination that goes on in
today's world. All of these types of sex discrimination wage gap, difficulties advancing, and hiring
discrimination are just some reasons why the American Dream is not equally available to women.
As portrayed in The Catbird Seat, people do not feel comfortable with women in a position
of power in the workplace, especially men. Because of this, women have a harder time achieving
success in their careers and so they are unable to reach the American Dream. According to the article
Women, Sexual Politics & the American Dream, Lawrence R. Velvel, the provocative dean of
Massachusetts Law School states, Today... there is one very large group of people who are
beginning to understand that the American Dream is usually not true for them. They are just over half
the population. They are women (qtd. in Mazur). Women work just as hard as men, sometimes
harder only to crash into the glass ceiling. Even if a woman is in a position of power, like Mrs.
Barrows, they still face discrimination and can be fired for illegitimate reasons. This is just one
example of how the American Dream is not an opportunity for all no matter how hard you work.
In The Catbird Seat, Thurber focuses on the belief that women should not hold positions of
power in the workplace, bringing up the issue that the American Dream is not available to all.
Women of today have made much progress since Thruber wrote this story; however, they are still
being held back by sex discrimination. This is just one of many points that proves that the American
Dream does not exist for everyone.

Works Cited
Adams, B. (1993, October 29). The glass ceiling. CQ Researcher, 3, 937-960. from CQ
Researcher 1993102900. Web. 1- Dec. 2009.
Billitteri, T. J. (2008, March 14). Gender pay gap. CQ Researcher, 18, 241-264. Web. 9 December
2009, from CQ Researcher 2008031400.
Mazur, Suzan. "Women, Sexual Politics & the American Dream." Scoop. N.p., July 2006. Web. 10
Dec. 2009.
Peppard, Kiki. "Legal Discrimination Against Women in Hiring." Feminist Law Professors. N.p.,
Sept. 2006. Web. 10 Dec. 2009.

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Tribute to Faculty
We warmly pay tribute to all submitting instructors, past and present.
Their dedicated and inspired teaching has contributed to
the successful publication of their students work
in ESSAI Volume I through Volume VIII.
Scott Albert

Chikako D. Kumamoto

Jim Allen

Lynn Mackenzie

Deborah Adelman

Anne C. Malone

Kathleen Altman

Nicole Matos

E. Bates

Jackie McGrath

Patty Benson

Christine Monnier

Brian Blevins

Katie Nagel

Scott Boyd

Nick Obradovich

Franz Burnier

Chris Petersen

Allan Carter

Kamelia Popova

Nancy Conradt

Loretta Pyrdek

Sue Dreghorn

Eva Maria Raepple

Barbara Eaton

Linda Randa

Linda Elaine

Kent Richter

Helen Feng

Carol Riphenburg

Bob Georgalas

Shamili Sandiford

Gloria Golec

Steve Schroeder

Ida Hagman

Hema Shende

Naheed Hasan

Dale Simpson

Lisa Higgins

Jason Snart

Connie C. Howard

Alice Snelgrove

Bill Hussong

Susan Stamler

Richard Jarman

Lois Stanciak

Ellen C. K. Johnson

Jodi Stapleton

Deb Lantermo

Carol Strelczyk

David Leary

Kathleen Szeszol

Freyda Libman

Ben Whisenhunt

Keith Krasemann

Liz Whiteacre

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Parenti: <em>A Traveler from Altruria:</em> Book Analysis

Cumulative Index of Student Authors

Volume I (2002-2003)
Kristyn Bales
Virginia Bateman
Barbara Bergschicker
Hillary J. Brown
Tess Cole
Dean Costello
Joi Cuartero
Ryan Fowler

Susanne K. Frens
Alexa Greer
Thomas Hemmingsen
Karen Hess
Jennifer Hixon
Lauren Hovis
Natalie A. Howes

Beth Bednarz
Roger Darringrand
Lynn Dehlinger
Natallia Ervin
Brittany Gross
Brandi Halle
Allison Hamad
Chris Harvey

Anna Hendrey
Jennifer Hixon
Marsella Jorgolli
Michael Kundert
Sarah Magin
Daniel McCullum
Mary Meir
Andy Morris

Sarah Huber
Dara Huff
Stephanie McMahan
Rachel Meek
Andrew Morris
Stacy Nalley
Mary E. Norton

Lindsay Olsen
Ginny Pace
Megan Posch
Jason Schramm
Dan Swindle
Abe Whiting
Chin Yang

Volume II (2003-2004)
Noorjabeen Naseer
My Nguyen
Kristopher ODell
Aaron Olson
Chris Orlock
Richard Payton
Nadia Qazi

Cara Raimon
Frank Redmond
Jonathan Scherer
Maya Strahl
Jasmine Thorne
Bonnie White
Michelle Ziehn

Volume III (2004-2005)


Tanya Basu
Mary Bodine
Wendy Carpenter
Meredith Carey
Thomas Ferguson
Michael Graczyk
Victoria Graham

Sara Heppner
Benjamin Hooper
Brian Kinsman
Valentine Kopjo
Kathy Kozak
Sean Labb
Rebecca Lunev

Karen L. Arneson
Lisa Bonomo
Steve Braun
Brian Casario
Patrick Caulfield
Joseph Cholewa
Joe Cinquegrani
Janet Crawford
Andy Dameron

Dodi Dolendi
Laura Dubberke
Heather A. Duncan
Christine Dyslin
Rebecca Eineke
Shannon Grilli
Kristina Grudem
Emily N. Hansen
Jason Hernandez

Julie McKee
Matt Naglewski
Stacy Nalley
Allan Norgaard
Jason Nosek
Richard Payton
Megan Posch

Nadia Qazi
David Rojas
Maggie Smith
Ruth Valentine
Anthony Wilder
Roberta Williams
Sharon Wussow

Volume IV (2005-2006)
William Hodges
Benjamin Hooper
Janelle A. Jenkins
Hannah Kim
Ruslan Kochemirovskiy
Emily Krauspe
Maren Ann McKee
Tabitha Metreger
Jason Morrow

Keiko Narisako
Jeremy Shier
Jason Smith
Joan Tett
Jennifer Vail
Alicia Voss
Weien Wang
Justin Wedekind

Volume V (2006-2007)
Karen L. Arneson
David Beck
Natalie Berent
Leslie A. Bertram
Angela Cibich
Peter Cohen
Joseph A. Deardurff
Lauren Del Carlo
Camille Diebold

Kennerly Diebold
Melissa Donahue
Christine Dyslin
Travis Farrington
Jessica Gibbs
Victoria Graham
Lucy A. Hawke
Matt Horan

Natalie Hustead
Shaina Hutson
Jenna L. Keefe
Anna Kinsella
Alison Lederer
Keelin Lord
Tracy Noeske
Zachary Peschke

Carey Raupp
Daniel Smith
Nicholas Treff
Ashley Urban
Alice Wieduwilt
Rutger Wolfgang Stache
Fariah Zainuddin
Ava Zandieh

166
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41

ESSAI, Vol. 8 [2010], Art. 34

Volume VI (2007-2008)
Kristin Arita
Krystal N. Arrate
Cristina Baica
William Berkhout
Julie Bertacchi
Kavita Bhavsar
Michael Butler
Leah Cameron
Victoria Canaday
Howard

Joanna Ciesielski
Katherine Ciesla
Michael Davis
Christine Dyslin
Jessica Eller
Carrie Fenwick
Joel Griswell
Shan Haq
Jennifer Horst

Mo Ismail
Lyndon Kacick
Nick Kogos
Matthew Kos
Jenny Letourneau
Heather Lydon
Melissa Maida
Ali Malik
Margaret McNulty

Nathan Meno
Katherine Morales
Sylvia Morales
Lydia Newby
Agnes Mary Reband
Jennifer Rodriguez
Matt Sauter
Robert Schletz
Christina Scott

Tom Serb
Samantha Sferas
Judy Staiano
Kara Stevenson
Adrienne Tam
Christina Villa
Cynthia L. Witt

Volume VII (2008-2009)


Jacob Albaugh
Ashley Aller
Kyle Berthel
Courtney Bobko
Ellen Briggs
Dave Broche
Mary Beth Broda
Patrick Buranicz

Brittany Burkes
Katherine Ciesla
Ryan Corrigan
Jonathon Drews
Bethany Ester
Aly Gentile
Tiffany Gray
Scott Hixson

Edward Hren
Grant L. Iler
Graham Johnson
Casey Jones
Susan Kareska
Sunya Kashan
Nick Kontos
Laurel Kunath

Chris Lemke
Emily Lombardi
Melissa
Mastrogiovanni
Sean McGowan
Mateja Mircic
Phuong Nguyen
Connie Padera

Harry Podschwit
Zach Porlier
Nick Rascia
Olivia Schultz
Brandon Slate
Richards Walker
Michael Wendt
Anum Zafar

Volume VIII (2009-2010)


Kelsey Barron
Geneva Beles
Christine Berta
Lauren Blanford
Chelsey Boutan
Sarah Burgess
Stephanie Christian

Eileen Corley
Sally Jo Detloff
Justin Eberhart
Nathan Samuel Ellingsen
Danny Hankes
Max Hermann
Christopher Hunton

Charise Joy Javonillo


Tim Kamin
Breanne Kanak
Julie Kelsey
Sarah Lichtenwalter
Daniel Lowder
Mandie McGlynn

Matthew Murray
Bekah Myroup
Lily Nicholson
Sean O'Leary
Tina Osornio
Sarah Oxley
M. Lisa Parenti
Zach Porlier

James T. Ricker
Shannon Rohn
Susan Schumacher
Alana Shuma
Emily Stephen
Lauren Stull
Jennifer Wendt
Amanda Woolum

167
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