have book smarts and people who have street smarts. People who have book smarts can work with their brains, where people
Sophia M. Huss Professor John S. Benson English 102-05 16 September 2016 “Hidden Intellectualism”: Beyond the Books We have all been in the position where we have had the option between writing a dissertation on some academic subject, the Industrial Revolution for example, or the generally more favored option of watching football or reading about who Taylor Swift is dating now. Many would argue that while they would rather spend their time scrolling through social media and keeping up with the latest
Gerald Graff’s essay “Hidden Intellectualism” refutes the age-old idea that ‘street smarts’ are anti-intellectual. Instead, Graff suggests that “schools and colleges are at fault for missing the opportunity to tap into such street smarts and channel them into academic smarts.” (244). In saying this, Graff argues that lacking book smarts does not render a person unintelligent. Rather, educational institutions need to find a way to effectively use this format of intellectualism to produce academic
Abby Langdon English Comp 1 In the time surrounding the 1950s, intellectualism was hostilely viewed by most, and was a subject towards which division and ambivalence were pointed. Book-smarts and intellectualism were contrasts to regular life. The article “Hidden Intellectualism” is written by a man named Gerald Graff, an English and Education professor at the University of Illinois in Chicago. In his article, Graff argues with a compelling case, that not only is intellectualism found in the
sweeping statements regarding the importance of street smarts and common sense versus book smarts, and behavior and comments placing added value on street smarts. (Bostrom, 2005) The first thing field training officers will tell a rookie straight out of the academy is, (whether in college or not) “forget everything you have learned.” For this reason, many field training officers like to work with individuals who have street smarts rather than college book
wish to have whether that be education, volunteering, or donating. Also, street smarts is not to be overlooked; a person with common sense can know more than a Doctor. Typically, a person can have either common sense or intelligence, not both. Street smarts is, without a doubt, a superior quality to possess as it encompasses more in life than just a degree does. For example, it is more appropriate to know how to cross a street properly in life than know how to perform a craniotomy. Furthermore, one
Book review: Ho, Karen. (2009). Liquidated: An ethnography of Wall Street. Durham: Duke University Press, 2009. In the wake of the recent financial crisis, many commentators attempted to analyze the roots of the conflict from a political or economic perspective. Anthropologist Karen Ho, a veteran of Wall Street as well as an academic, attempted to understand the reason that Wall Street behaves the way it does in her 2009 anthropological study of American finance entitled Liquidated: An ethnography
Teachers should step in ‘’street smarts’’ and help them to find their hidden intellectualism. Graff manage the distance between him and the reader, establishing a relationship using his life experiences through the essay. Graff makes some effective and persuasive points, taking the attention
As I observed, since the technology was made, most of us are just depending on it instead of using our own knowledge and our instincts. But before it was created, people back then are very smart , they developed something without the help of those technologies. So now, let's discuss about the digital native versus digital immigrant in order for us to learn their differences. Digital native describes those persons who are now engaging the digital technology world. These are the persons who exist/grows-up
Perry Wallace is the main character in my book “Strong Inside” by Andrew Maraniss. He is a African-American male in a very racist time. He is a “complex individual” because of his life in a racist time that shaped him. Ever since Wallace was a young boy he was the best behaved in his class. “Whether it was the imposing figure of Chef Jewel, the female bishop who ran the school, or the lessons on respect he had learned from his parents, Perry was the best-behaved kid in kindergarten.” This shows how