« Ecology of Fear: Los Angeles and the Imagination of DisasterWinter World: The Ingenuity of Animal Survival »

My Freshman Year: What a Professor Learned by Becoming a Student

Rebekah Nathan
Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2005

Imagine if your professors were able to hang out with you in the dorms, sit next to you in lecture, or had to wait like you in long lines for services. In other words, really get a sense of your day-to-day life as a student. Well, anthropologist Cathy Small (writing under the pseudonym "Rebekah Nathan") did just that by enrolling as an undergraduate at Northern Arizona University, where she teaches. Although her intentions were to uncover why students just seemed to be "surviving" through the curriculum by doing minimal work, Small discovers that students have a desire to be challenged even when they are being discouraged by their peers or poor teaching. This ethnography is a must-read for any undergraduate wanting to thrive, and not just survive, at a research university.

Gonzalo Arrizon
Study Strategies Coordinator, Student Learning Center

Find in your library

May 30, 2007 | Categories: 2007: Survival | Kathleen Gallagher

Welcome to Berkeley! Every summer, we send new freshmen a list of books suggested by faculty and staff from across campus. This is not an “official” list, or even a list of required reading. It’s just for you to enjoy as you wish.

This year, we asked the Cal community to recommend books—of any genre—about survival: the threats to survival, the paths to survival, tales of survival from the past, and thoughts on what it means to survive—or not. The books they recommended variously explore how humans, plants, and animals struggle to cope, and sometimes thrive, in certain environments. Collectively the list offers scientific, humanistic, social, historical, and futuristic perspectives on how this theme relates to us as individuals, cultures, species, and as a planet.

These books are all available in the UC Berkeley libraries. Since many of you will be far from campus this summer, you may want to check out a copy from your local library or buy one from a bookstore near you. We hope you’ll choose to read at least one, as a reminder that UC Berkeley is a vital intellectual community that generates and debates fascinating and important ideas.

Elizabeth Dupuis
The Library

Steve Tollefson
College Writing Programs
Office of Educational Development

Search

Subscribe

  • RSS
  • Bloglines
  • MyYahoo!
  • MyMSN
  • Newsgator
  • Google Feeds
How to subscribe

blogtool