Learning, But Not by the
Book
By Chris O'Meara
Associated Press
Tuesday, April 12, 2005; Page A12
Some college courses never seem to go away -- the venerable "history of
math," for example. But schools do try to keep up with the times by overhauling
the content, looking for a unique resource, or inventing entirely new ones that
sometimes combine approaches from different disciplines.
Some schools have long taught politics or sociology by looking through
the prism of popular music -- The Beatles and Bruce Springsteen, for example --
but today Hip-Hop is employed. Many college students learn about the Watergate
scandal but only those at the University of Texas at Austin can easily avail
themselves of the newly purchased papers of Washington Post reporters Bob
Woodward and Carl Bernstein. And there are a range of new courses created since
the 9/11 attacks dealing with national security issues.
I pulled this from a much longer article. This course was
designed and is taught by Corinne Scheiner, a longtime subscriber to
NABOKV-L.
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Colorado College, Colorado Springs
Nabokov's Butterflies
Course combines comparative literature and biology, examining the
intersections between Vladimir Nabokov's work as a lepidopterist and a writer. A
highlight: A weeklong field trip in which students retrace one of Nabokov's own
butterfly-hunting expeditions in the Southwest and catch butterflies; given that
Nabokov wrote Lolita during such an expedition, students read Lolita along the
way.