 |  | EDUCATION SUPPLEMENT |
| | Lander gentry: Free lectures are for everyone, not just white people like the author. | University of Trend-sylvania
Ignore the hyped-up clubs and hipster bars. Back to school is what’s cool.  by Becca Trabin

Who doesn’t miss the intellectual fervor of a college campus? I graduated last week
and I already feel my brain cells deteriorating into carriers of information about loan
deferment provisions and healthcare packages. Past Fridays spent at “Dissent in America”
teach-ins will now be spent scanning mediabistro.com for job listings. But no matter
where we are in life, we could all use a few supplementary lectures to satisfy our nerdy
need for communal cerebral workouts.
Fortunately, local colleges have some decent symposia this semester that are free and
open to the public. Join your local book club for One Book, One Philadelphia, attend a
few of the free lectures below and call it grad school.
To start off with, Penn Bookstore (3601 Walnut St. 215.898.7595) offers up a solid
platter of authors over the next few weeks. Tonight at 7 do as white people do and
attend a book signing with Christian Lander, creator of the blog and
bestselling book Stuff White People Like. Tomorrow night (6pm) hear
Drexel prof Arthur Shostak discuss ideas for the future of K-12 education,
or if you’re free during the day (aka, unemployed) visit with writer Nadine
Haobsh, who’ll be signing copies of Confessions of a Beauty
Addict at 2 p.m.
At Wharton two more Wednesday- night lectures (5pm, 3730 Walnut St. 215.898.5000) from
the series “Jews in Business: Between Myth and Reality” break down
stereotypes and conspiracy theories by discussing “the more complex tale of economic
opportunity and group survival.” Presented by guest lecturers from Paris and Haifa, this
series is a good opportunity to educate our way out of post-Madoff depression.
Coming in February, Paley Library’s Chat in the Stacks Series (2:30pm,
1201 W. Berks St. 215.204.0916) features notable director Lee Richardson’s
play The Seven, based on Aeschlyus’ Seven Against Thebes.
Richardson will discuss the play between actors performing live scenes.
On Feb. 18 Penn professor David Eng comes to the Paley. Eng is the
co-editor of Q & A: Queer in Asian America and author of
Racial Castration: Managing Masculinity in Asian America. His
lecture, “Queer Space in China,” which he recently gave at the University
of Sydney, deals with issues of public and private gay and lesbian identities in
contemporary China.
For media addicts, the Annenberg School for Communication will present “An
Introduction to the Phenomenology of Television: What Happens When I Turn on the TV
Set” (6:15pm. 3620 Walnut St. 215.746.2874). So if you haven’t gotten around
to reading Hegel, Heidegger and Husserl, but you know your way around the Oxygen
Network, this lecture could be for you.
And finally, the Grand Poobah of free lectures in Philadelphia: On Feb. 20 Drexel
hosts “The Student Conference on Global Challenges—Energy and Environment”
(8:30am, Behrakis Hall, 3141 Chestnut St. 215.895.6372). This all-day conference
features keynote speaker Jerald Schnoor, editor-in-chief of
Environmental Science and Technology. Panels will discuss different
aspects of global challenges, like business trends, health, justice and human rights,
media, science and technology, and social and economic trends.
And let’s not underestimate student panels: Of the 300,000 undergraduates in the metro
area, there are bound to be at least 50 who are obsessed with some global challenge or
another to the point of genius. If you’re one of these students, go to the homepage for
Drexel’s Office of International Programs and fill out the application, and then in one
month, rain down the smarts.
That’s right, little prodigy: I’m telling you to leave your dorm room because the
world needs your fresh ideas before you get a 9-to-5 and go stale. Do it while you can.
You have the rest of your life to turn to thoughts of mortgage rates and cholesterol.
Listings
University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education: “Interested in Making a
Difference?”
Penn Graduate School of Education offers Ph.D., Ed.D., M.S.Ed., M.S. and
M.Phil.Ed degrees. GSE seeks students interested in promoting understanding of
educational issues and contributing to societal change. Curriculum places emphasis on
interactive relationship of theory, research and practice, focusing on urban education.
GSE students are agents of change within the university and Philadelphia neighborhoods.
Graduate School of Education. University of Pennsylvania
3700 Walnut St.
Phone: 1.877.PENN.GSE
Fax: 215.746.6884
Email: admissions@gse.upenn.edu
Web: www.gse.upenn.edu
Council for Relationships
Council for Relationships has been helping people in the Greater
Philadelphia area live their best lives since 1932. With 14 convenient offices,
sliding-scale fees, classes, programs and individual, couples and family counseling,
Master’s and postgraduate programs, CFR is the place to turn, when you’re ready to
improve your life and your relationships. To learn more and to sign up for our free
articles, please visit our website or call us.
4025 Chestnut St.
Phone: 215.382.6680
Web: www.CouncilFor Relationships.org
Temple University Center City: 2009 Non-Credit Courses
Computer training, website design, management and leadership, editing and
proofreading and more. Enrichment classes include cooking, exercise, music, dance,
languages and wine. See website for full course schedule.
Temple University Center City Non-Credit Programs
1515 Market St.
Phone: 215.204.6946
Web: www.temple.edu/tucc
Samuel S. Fleisher Art Memorial
Whether you’re a beginning artist or a seasoned professional there’s a
course of study for you at Fleisher. As an adult student you can begin at any point in
the term and take as many open enrollment classes as often as you want. Register now!
Phone: 215.922.3456
Web: www.fleisher.org
Summer Academy for High School Students: Four Weeks, Four Disciplines
The Summer Academy is the definitive program for talented and motivated high
school students intent on a fine arts education. Offering rigorous,
college-level studio courses in drawing, painting, printmaking and sculpture,
the Summer Academy can help you develop your artistry and skill, and make you
more competitive for college. July 6–31.
The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
128 N. Broad St.
Phone: 215.972.7632.
Email: continuinged@pafa.edu
Web: www.pafa.edu/ SummerAcademy
|