Category Archives: David Hodges

Counterintuitive Budget Cuts

I try to keep my politics in check in the classroom and just be upset about everything no matter which side of the House it comes from, so I apologize that the article this post links to has Republicans in … Continue reading

Posted in Counterintuitivity, David Hodges, Professor Posts | Leave a comment

The “CSI Effect”

Is it possible long exposure to “procedural TV shows” like CSI has tainted jurors’ expectations? Do citizens sitting on juries expect investigators to have DNA results in 20 minutes, or to employ extremely high-tech methods to catching and convicting every … Continue reading

Posted in Counterintuitivity, David Hodges, Professor Posts | Leave a comment

When Cigarettes Cost $222 a Pack

Ah, the stuff we burn! Take fossil fuels, for example. Why do we continue to burn them after all we know about how they strangle the planet? Because they’re still so cheap. Yes, even when it costs $500 a month … Continue reading

Posted in Counterintuitivity, David Hodges, Professor Posts | Leave a comment

More Ideas for the Desperate

Still not happy with your research topic? These may get you thinking: CLEAN GIRLS GET SICKER? There’s a growing body of research showing that children exposed to lots of germs early in life are less likely to develop allergies, asthma … Continue reading

Posted in Counterintuitivity, David Hodges, Professor Posts | Leave a comment

Bad Mammograms Reconsidered

The more mammograms a radiologist reads, the more obscure tumors she will find. Just so, I hope you’ll become better attuned to spotting counterintuitivities in everything you read as the semester proceeds. Here are some you may have missed when … Continue reading

Posted in Counterintuitivity, David Hodges, Professor Posts | Leave a comment

Is Home Cooking Bad for Our Health?

Josh Darpino wrote this bit of counterintuitive thinking for my Comp 2 class, SP11. Maybe it will help you consider food as a topic. What if I told you that fast food is bad for you. You would intuitively say, … Continue reading

Posted in Counterintuitivity, David Hodges | Leave a comment

Counterintuitive Research Ideas for the Desperate

If you’re still having trouble deciding on your own research topic, it may be helpful to contemplate the many simple facts of daily life that defy logic, or don’t accomplish what they intend, or seem peculiar until we understand their … Continue reading

Posted in Counterintuitivity, David Hodges | Leave a comment

Freakonomics

Masters of counterintuitive thinking and popular authors of the book Freakonomics and the companion column in the New York Times, Steven D. Levitt, the economist, and Stephen J. Dubner, the writer, find unexpected explanations for human behavior everywhere they look. … Continue reading

Posted in Counterintuitivity, David Hodges, Professor Posts | Leave a comment

For-Profit Prisons

The very phrase “for-profit prison” should raise a red flag for anyone on the lookout for counterintuitivity. Once governments were the builders, owners, and administrators of prisons, but budgets for government services and capital investments have not kept up with … Continue reading

Posted in Counterintuitivity, David Hodges, Professor Posts | Leave a comment

Grade Levels 2

I wrote two sentences in my recent post “Counterintuitive Econundrums,” that I realized while I was writing them contained about a paragraph of material each. They’re not perfect sentences, and I won’t try to edit them now that they’re on … Continue reading

Posted in Course Documents, David Hodges, Professor Posts | Leave a comment