Michigan Today - July 2008

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U-M HERITAGE »

Panty raid, 1952

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The first warm night of 1952. Music blares. Students' thoughts turn to love and fighting. Time to launch a national craze: the panty raid.

Most emailed stories

Health

Coping with "chemo brain"

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It may be in your head, but it's not your imagination. Cancer patients may find that chemotherapy causes cognitive problems.

Talking about science

Go with the flow

Talking about science

Physics can clarify the energy crisis by getting back to basics.

TALKING ABOUT WORDS »

My Word ®

Talking about science

Have you made up any words lately? There's no shortage of people who claim they have.

TALKING ABOUT MOVIES »

What is Bollywood?

Lagaan

Some of the world's most spectacular movies are being made in Bollywood. But fewer really know what really sets these films apart.

research news

New U-M project probes Americans' values

June 27, 2008

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As the fall elections draw near, an innovative new University of Michigan research project is probing the values behind Americans' political decisions.

The project Web site, www.ourvalues.org, provides visitors with a chance to weigh in on a changing array of hot-button issues from polygamy to patriotism to same-sex marriage.

Public comments and responses to "flash poll" questions on the site will inform the content of a major survey on Americans' Evolving Values, to be fielded by the U-M Institute for Social Research (ISR).

"I am very enthusiastic about this website," said Wayne Baker, a professor at the U-M Ross School of Business and a faculty associate at ISR. "Not only will it help to define the content of the coming survey, it represents a new, 'open source' approach to research that is based on 'the wisdom of crowds' rather than only the insights of a small group of academics."

Baker, a sociologist, is developing the content and leading the discussions on the new website, which offers site visitors a chance to comment on the topic of the day, or on other issues on their minds. For the coming, nationally representative survey on Americans' Evolving Values, Baker is collaborating with social psychologist James S. Jackson, who directs the ISR.

"We live in a time when there is more debate than ever about what being an American means," Jackson said. "As we move forward, it is vital to understand the underlying values and principles that Americans of all ages and backgrounds share. An important goal of this larger project is to clarify how basic values are linked with political, economic, and religious behavior."

Baker has developed the OurValues Web site in collaboration with David Crumm, founding editor of ReadtheSpirit.com and former religion writer with the Detroit Free Press.

"The recent controversies about the spiritual advisors to both presidential candidates have receded, but religious and moral values remain an important dimension underlying many contemporary political issues," Crumm said. "Dr. Baker's project is a new way for concerned Americans to let leaders know what they value, and why."

Diane Swanbrow is a writer with the University of Michigan News Service.