jonas
@jh1791.bsky.social
980 followers 1.9K following 2K posts
Sociology and/of religion. Semi-pro dilettante. A damned Vermont person™ in the Shenandoah Valley. The Arsenal. We need more heavy metal. And whiskey. Probably.
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jh1791.bsky.social
Very happy to announce the availability "Religion in Sociological Perspective, 8th edition."
Many thanks to David Yamane for taking me on for this new edition. It will be available in the coming weeks, and definitely ready for your spring courses!

collegepublishing.sagepub.com/products/rel...
Cover for a textbook: Religion in Sociological Perspective, 8th edition.
jh1791.bsky.social
That market is well beyond it's normal absurdity, as you know.
Reposted by jonas
jessicacalarco.com
They're trying to prevent the student newspaper from printing news, period. Not just a particular story.

"The Media School directed us to print no news in the paper... nothing but information about homecoming — no other news at all, and particularly no traditional front page news coverage."
jessicacalarco.com
Indiana University has fired the staff director of the student newspaper, after disputes in which university leadership tried to pressure him to prevent students from publishing news.
IndyStar 2 . Follow
1h:
"All Media School and IU students, faculty and staff
should be scared by this blatant attack on someone
standing up for what's right," student Editors-ln-Chief
Mia Hilkowitz and Andrew Miller said in a statement.
Read more: bit.ly/43ebKW1
IndyStar.
IDS
The original investigative student
newsroom of Indiana University
Barge suspends Bloomingtonr
LITTLE 500
IDS
IDS
She should've
knownbetter:'
nt
in
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eoiencnalt.
A
INnpttM
Indiana University fires IDS
adviser amid push to control
student newspaper's content The director of student media at Indiana University was fired amidst a dispute between university leadership and editors at the Indiana Daily Student over what content gets printed in the student newspaper.

As director of student media, Jim Rodenbush did not directly oversee or have any say over the content published in the IDS, per a charter between the IDS and the university. But he told IndyStar his firing follows a series of meetings with IU Media School leadership in which it grew increasingly apparent they were expecting him to officially prohibit students from publishing news.
jh1791.bsky.social
Just arms and a head in the 2nd one...
jh1791.bsky.social
How long before those data are scraped and compiled into a user dossier?

What am I talking about?
The answer is: immediately.
jh1791.bsky.social
Claaaaaasic Ivy Leaguer

😁
jh1791.bsky.social
Unfortunately, no. But I probably have some short, recorded lectures I'd be happy to send along.
jh1791.bsky.social
Intro sociology. In this particular instance, it's a horrible reminder that classical sociological theory, while sometimes problematic, still offers insight into social ills that are as prevalent today as they were in mid 19th c. Europe.
jh1791.bsky.social
That's putting it kindly!
jh1791.bsky.social
I tell my students about them every semester.

Nets. Around. The. Buildings...

To. Catch. People.

I tell u wut, that there Marx was a crackpot...
jh1791.bsky.social
Way to ruin childhoods...
jh1791.bsky.social
Same, Sherm. Same.
jh1791.bsky.social
I'm old enough to know this.

And I'm not happy about it.
Reposted by jonas
ophastings.bsky.social
The GSS asked the same people about their childhood income rank three different times. 56% changed their answer, even though what was trying to be measured couldn’t change! We dig into this in a new article at @socialindicators.bsky.social. 



doi.org/10.1007/s112...

🧵👇 (1/5)
Growing up Different(ly than Last Time We Asked): Social Status and Changing Reports of Childhood Income Rank - Social Indicators Research
How we remember our past can be shaped by the realities of our present. This study examines how changes to present circumstances influence retrospective reports of family income rank at age 16. While retrospective survey data can be used to assess the long-term effects of childhood conditions, present-day circumstances may “anchor” memories, causing shifts in how individuals recall and report past experiences. Using panel data from the 2006–2014 General Social Surveys (8,602 observations from 2,883 individuals in the United States), we analyze how changes in objective and subjective indicators of current social status—income, financial satisfaction, and perceived income relative to others—are associated with changes in reports of childhood income rank, and how this varies by sex and race/ethnicity. Fixed-effects models reveal no significant association between changes in income and in childhood income rank. However, changes in subjective measures of social status show contrasting effects, as increases in current financial satisfaction are associated with decreases in childhood income rank, but increases in current perceived relative income are associated with increases in childhood income rank. We argue these opposing effects follow from theories of anchoring in recall bias. We further find these effects are stronger among males but are consistent across racial/ethnic groups. This demographic heterogeneity suggests that recall bias is not evenly distributed across the population and has important implications for how different groups perceive their own pasts. Our findings further highlight the malleability of retrospective perceptions and their sensitivity to current social conditions, offering methodological insights into survey reliability and recall bias.
doi.org
Reposted by jonas
davidyamane.bsky.social
PUBLICATION ALERT: Religion in Sociological Perspective, 8th edition, was just published by @sagepub.com. Pleased to have @jh1791.bsky.social join me as a co-author.

FREE COPIES: Retweet this post before 10/17 for a chance to win one of 5 copies!