The New Dictionary Of Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know
The New Dictionary Of Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know book cover

The New Dictionary Of Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know

Hardcover – Illustrated, October 3, 2002

Price
$18.89
Format
Hardcover
Pages
672
Publisher
Collins Reference
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0618226474
Dimensions
7.69 x 1.8 x 9.25 inches
Weight
5.7 ounces

Description

From Publishers Weekly This third edition of the 1988 reference, full of the same back-to-basics philosophy of the earlier volumes, promises to once again serve as a lightning rod for lively discussion. Divided into chapters such as "The Bible" (the editors point out that, regardless of one's religion, it is impossible to be culturally literate without some Biblical knowledge, just as one needs to know the Koran to be literate in Arab culture), "Technology," "Idioms," "World Geography," "Mythology and Folklore" (which includes everything from Medusa to Mickey Mouse) and "Literature in English," the book is a compendium of thumbnail definitions of the bedrock items that make up society. This latest volume includes about 500 (out of nearly 7,000) new entries, 200 of which are in the science and technology chapters. Other entries have been revised and updated. It's entertaining, snappily written, extremely handy and reasonably inclusive (although there are bound to be readers who will find issue with Hirsch's well-known conservative ideologies). Although the book will be a godsend for home schoolers and teachers looking to give students a basic reference, ultimately it may be seen as a giant list, along the same lines as the much-debated list of essential literature that Harold Bloom included in The Western Canon. Arguments over it will probably not center on its stylistics, but on who or what the editors consider essential e.g., Allen Ginsburg made the cut; Jack Kerouac did not.Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Library Journal Initially published in 1988 and revised in 1993, this book is given an exciting update whose 6900 entries include 1000 revised entries and 500 new ones, 200 of which are in science and technology alone. Given the book's aim to define "common cultural knowledge rather than to present a lexicon of words or topics," a revision was sorely needed; when the second edition appeared, almost no one knew what a web page was. The text is divided into sections by subject-e.g., fine arts, world politics, life sciences-each with a brief introduction; access is also aided by a thorough index. The entries themselves are complete, concise, and clearly written as well as extensively and effectively cross-referenced. All that need be said about this first-rate reference is that it is well written, well researched, and well worth the money. Students, general readers, trivia buffs, and those who like to have a great reference work at their fingertips will find it informative, useful, and just plain fun. Highly recommended. Manya S. Chylinski, Ernst & Young Ctr. for Business Knowledge, Boston Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Booklist The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy is the most recent list of "background knowledge needed to be able to read with understanding." Hirsch published Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know (Houghton) in 1987, the Dictionary of Cultural Literacy in 1988 (Houghton), and a revised Dictionary in 1993 (Houghton). He believes that "shared information is the foundation of our public discourse . . . that allows us to comprehend our daily newspapers and news reports, to understand our peers and leaders, and even to share our jokes. Cultural literacy is the context of what we say and read." The compilers selected items "likely to be known by a broad majority of literate Americans" and of "lasting significance." Cultural Literacy was praised as the most important book on education to appear in years but also criticized as being elitist and conservative, with most of the entries in use for at least 100 years and an emphasis on print media. The authors produced the third edition "to keep up with the changes in American culture," adding 500 new entries, 200 in the "Science and Technology" section, and updating 1,000 others. Internet and computer-related terms (FAQ, laptop, snail mail ) are among the most important additions. The 7,000 entries are arranged alphabetically within 23 sections, including "The Bible," "Fine Arts," "World and American History," and "Physical, Earth, and Life Sciences." Entries include brief definitions and cultural associations, such as "an olive branch is now regarded as a sign of peace, as is the dove." The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy is a tool for assessing cultural literacy, not a first choice for definitions of terms. It should not be compared with other specialized dictionaries, especially popular culture compendia. In it, Java is an island in Indonesia, not programming language or Starbucks staple, and Pluto is a planet and the god of the underworld, not a cartoon dog. Popular with trivia fans and familiar to educators, this resource will be requested in academic, high-school, and public libraries. RBB Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved "Well written, well researched, and well worth the money." Library Journal — James Trefil, the Clarence J. Robinson Professor of Physics at George Mason University, is the author or coauthor of more than thirty books, including The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. PrefaceA third edition! My colleagues and I have never wavered in our conviction that the theory behind The Dictionary of Cultural Literacy is sound, as it is based on well-established findings of linguistics and cognitive psychology. But it is gratifying to learn that its scholarly soundness has found a practical resonance with the public. A new edition is called for to keep up with the changes in American culture. This book contains about five hundred (out of nearly seven thousand) new entries, of which about two hundred are in the science and technology chapters. It is frightening to realize that when we wrote the second edition, almost no one knew what a Web page was. Of the remainder of the new entries, about half are in the fields of history, politics, and geography. A thousand entries have been revised for clarity and updated to reflect current usage. We hope that this book continues to be useful to Americans of all ages and backgrounds. I say "to Americans" because the concept of cultural literacy implies a national culture. Of course the entries reflect content from many nations of the world, and the principle of cultural literacy is implicitly international. There are by now German, Dutch, and Swedish versions of this book. But each is different, having been adapted to the relevant national language and culture. People within each of these national communities are bound together not just by political institutions and laws, but also by shared values and allusions and a shared language. The public understands that in the United States, our shared language contains not just "the" and "was" but "Birmingham Jail," "Sitting Bull," and "pay through the nose." (Explanations of idioms like "pay through the nose" have been especially welcomed by immigrant parents and children.) The public also understands that these shared meanings are essential for communication inside our nation — or, to put the matter simply, they are essential for reading. We all know that reading is the most important academic skill, and that there is a big reading gap between haves and have-nots in our schools. We know that reading skill is a key not just to a child"s success in school but also, in the information age, to his or her chances in life. That is why the federal government and now most of the states have started to place an enormous emphasis on reading. This is good news and bad news. It"s good news because becoming a good reader is so enormously important. It"s bad news because the people who make and carry out school policies have not been very sophisticated so far about what is needed, beyond sounding out words, to become a good reader. On the important matter of reading comprehension, their vision is vague and clouded. Talking about reading comprehension reminds me of Mark Twain"s comment on the weather: everybody talks about it, but nobody does anything about it. Reading comprehension scores have not gone up significantly. In the United States, reading with understanding is based on the kind of background knowledge identified in this book, and it is to be hoped that our schools will begin to do a better job of imparting this kind of knowledge to all children in a coherent and cumulative way. When they do, reading comprehension scores will go up.From the start, the premise of this dictionary was that true literacy — reading with comprehension — requires a lot more than sounding out the words on the page. Those who possess the needed, taken-for-granted knowledge can understand what they read, and those who lack that knowledge cannot. The haves learn ever more from what they read and hear; the have-nots fall further behind and lose the chance to become participating members of the wider community. That word "community" brings me to the second motivation behind this book, the connection between communication and community, especially in a democracy. A lot of American flags are flying these days. Some people think this is a worrisome show of nationalism, but I believe it is a show mainly of solidarity and community. Community is built up of shared knowledge and values — the same shared knowledge that is taken for granted when we read a book or newspaper, and that is also taken for granted as part of the fabric that connects us to one another. Horace Mann put it eloquently in his nineteenth-century way in making a case for public schooling and a common curriculum. Shared knowledge, he said, would enlarge "the cultivated class or caste and . . . open a wider area over which the social feelings will expand; and if this education should be universal and complete, it would do more than all things else to obliterate [artificial] distinctions in society." Mann thought that if everyone shared the enabling words and knowledge of our culture, everyone would gain a sense of solidarity with others. Social feelings would expand. Artificial distinctions of class and caste would be erased, and patriotic feelings would grow. The love of country — patriotism — is a very different sentiment from nationalism. A fine book by Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities, beautifully distinguishes between nationalist and patriotic sentiments. Nationalism is an aggrandizing, tribalistic sentiment that defines one"s own group as opposed to alien groups, which are seen as potential rivals or enemies to be overcome or excluded. Patriotism, by contrast, implies love of country without necessarily implying hostility to anybody else. American patriotism is built of shared knowledge, attitudes, loyalties, and values, including the values of nonexclusion, toleration, and respect for other religions and cultures. Americans have proved that it is possible to feel patriotic about a cosmopolitan, diverse country, which is loved more for its vital diversity than for its racial or ethnic purity. That was Walt Whitman"s patriotism, and Herman Melville"s. For most of our history, the United States has imagined itself as a patriotic rather than as a nationalist state. George Washington thought of himself and was celebrated as Cincinnatus, the Roman hero who wishes only to return to his hearth and his farm once the necessary sacrifice and service to the patria is accomplished. To that, Herman Melville added our modern idea of a nation that embraces all races and ethnic groups. He said,There is something in the contemplation of the mode in which America has been settled that, in a noble breast, should forever extinguish the prejudices of national dislikes. Settled by the people of all nations, all nations may claim her for their own. You can not spill a drop of American blood without spilling the blood of the whole world. . . . We are not a narrow tribe of men — No: our blood is as the flood of the Amazon, made up of a thousand noble currents all pouring into one. . . . For who were our father and mother? Or can we point to any Romulus and Remus for our founders? Our ancestry is lost in the universal paternity, and Caesar and Alfred, St. Paul and Luther, Homer and Shakespeare are as much ours as Washington, who is as much the world"s as our own.You might want to read the rest of this wonderful passage (Chapter 33) from Redburn, written in 1849. I won"t quote any more of it here. Suffice it to say that this American idea of a new kind of patriotism and community is a tradition that stretches from George Washington to Horace Mann and Herman Melville to ourselves, and it has not lost its pungency and capacity to inspire.—E. D. Hirsch, Jr.Charlottesville, Virginia, 2002TechnologyThere are two reasons to pursue scientific knowledge: for the sake of the knowledge itself, and for the practical uses of that knowledge. Because this second aspect of science affects the lives of most people, it is more familiar than the first. Knowledge must be gained, however, before it can be applied, and often the most important technological advances arise from research pursued for its own sake. Traditionally, new technology has been concerned with the construction of machines, structures, and tools on a relatively large scale. The development of materials for building bridges or skyscrapers is an example of this, as is the development of the internal-combustion engine and the nuclear reactor. While such activities involve all the sciences, from chemistry to nuclear physics, the overriding goal has been the same: to improve the human condition by finding better ways to deal with the macroscopic world. Since World War II, the focus of technological activity has undergone a major change. While the old activities are still pursued, they have been largely superseded by applications of technology at the microscopic level. Instead of building large-scale structures and machines, modern technology tends to concentrate on finding improved ways to transfer information and to develop new materials by studying the way atoms come together. The silicon chip and microelectronics typify this new technological trend, as does the blossoming of genetic engineering. The advent of the Internet is just one familiar consequence of this new trend, which can be expected to continue into the foreseeable future. The dividing line between what we include in the following list as technology and what we call science elsewhere in this volume is somewhat arbitrary. In general, what we have done is this: if a term is essential to understanding a particular branch of science, it appears in the list for that science. Thus, atom appears with the physical sciences, even though an understanding of atoms is clearly important to the new technology. If, however, the term involves something that is likely to affect an individual"s life, even though it is not a central concept of a particular branch of science, it is listed under "Technology."— J. T.alternating current (AC) An electric current in which the flow reverses periodically. (Compare direct current (DC).)* In the United States, most household current is AC, going through sixty reversal cycles each second. Electric motors in household appliances are designed to work with current at this rate of reversal.amp (ampere) (am-peer) A unit of electric current. One ampere corresponds to a certain number of electrons passing a fixed point each second.* A typical household"s electrical supply includes a total of 120 to 200 amps; a typical house circuit carries 15 to 50 amps.amplifier In electronics, a device that takes a small electric signal and converts it into a large one. Amplifiers are used in stereo systems, electric guitars, and loudspeakers.amplitude modulation (AM) A type of radio signal in which the amplitude, or strength, of a radio wave is varied in order to carry information from a transmitter to a receiver. (Compare frequency modulation (FM).)analog signal (an-uh-lawg, an-uh-log) A signal in which some feature increases and decreases in the same way as the thing being transmitted. In am radio, for example, the strength of the radio wave goes up and down in analogy with the loudness of the original sound. (Contrast digital signal.)Apollo program A series of space flights undertaken by the United States with a goal of landing a man on the moon. Each Apollo flight carried a crew of three astronauts. The first lunar landing by humans was achieved by Apollo 11 on July 20, 1969. Five other successful lunar landings followed. The Apollo program ended in 1974. It was named after the Greek god of learning, Apollo.*Neil Armstrong was the first man to set foot on the moon.Arpanet An acronym for Advanced Research Project Agency Network. An early communications network developed by the Department of Defense in the late 1960s. It connected high-tech research institutions and the military.* Creating a communications system that could survive a nuclear war was a major impetus behind the development of this system. * Arpanet is often spoken of as a precursor of the Internet.artificial intelligence (AI) The means of duplicating or imitating intelligence in computers, robots, or other devices, which allows them to solve problems, discriminate among objects, and respond to voice commands.ASCII An acronym for American Standard Code for Information Interchange. Computers use this code to standardize communication between different machines.astronaut A crew member of a space mission launched by the United States. (See Apollo program and Mercury program.)ATM An abbreviation for automated teller machine. This is a computer terminal that takes the place of a human bank teller and allows the user to access basic bank services, such as making deposits and cash withdrawals from remote locations, twenty-four hours a day.atomic bomb A bomb that is powered by nuclear fission, and therefore produces a quick release of energy and great destruction.backbone The primary line(s) that connects the slower, shorter cable portions of a communications network together. (See last mile.) In larger networks, such as the Internet, a backbone consists of high-capacity, high-speed lines that can extend over great distances.bandwidth The amount of data that can be carried by a digital communication medium, often expressed in hertz.* Within the radio and microwave portions of the electromagnetic spectrum limited bandwidth is available, and in the United States the use of the spectrum is regulated and allocated by the FCC. (See VHF and UHF.)bar code A series of parallel lines that can be read by an optical scanner and decoded by a computer into usable information. The ten-line Universal Product Code (UPC) on the packaging of retail items is an example of this. The key to this code is the variation in line thickness and separation.bathyscaph (bath-i-skaf) A deep-sea research vessel that carries a crew and is free to maneuver independently.battery A device that produces an electric current by harnessing the chemical reactions that take place within its cells.baud rate A number related to the speed of data transmission in a system. The rate indicates the number of electrical oscillations per second that occurs within a data transmission. The higher the baud rate, the more bits per second that are transferred.Bell, Alexander Graham An American inventor and scientist of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, born in Scotland. He invented the telephone in 1876. Much of Bell"s career was devoted to education of the deaf and to production of electronic devices to help them hear better.binary (beye-nuh-ree, beye-ner-ee) Anything composed of two parts. In modern computers, information is stored in banks of components that act like switches. Since switches can be either on or o., they have a binary character, and we say that the computer uses "binary arithmetic" to do its work.biological warfare The use of biological agents as weapons in warfare. Also called germ warfare.biometrics The measuring and analysis of such physical attributes as facial features and voice or retinal scans. This technology can be used to define an individual"s unique identity, often for security purposes.* Software is available that can match faces of individuals videotaped on the street to the picture of a suspected criminal or terrorist in a database. The use of biometrics is likely to increase in the future as security concerns become more of a priority for both governments and corporations following the September 11 attacks (2001).bioterrorism The use of biological agents as weapons of terror. Anthrax bacteria are one such agent, while smallpox is considered one of the more likely lethal viruses that could serve as a weapon of bioterror. (See germ warfare.)bit The smallest unit of information. One bit corresponds to a "yes" or "no." Some examples of a bit of information: whether a light is on or o., whether a switch (like a transistor) is on or o., whether a grain of magnetized iron points up or down.* The information in a digital computer is stored in the form of bits.black box A crash-resistant steel container that holds instruments that record performance data in airplanes. The data are used to analyze the causes of accidents.blackout The complete loss of electrical power in a particular area. Blackouts can result from a natural disaster, a manmade catastrophe, or simply from an excess of energy demand over supply. (Compare brownout.)Copyright © 2002 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Reprinted by permission of Houghton Mifflin Company. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • In this fast-paced information age, how can Americans know what's really important and what's just a passing fashion? Now more than ever, we need a source that concisely sums up the knowledge that matters to Americans -- the people, places, ideas, and events that shape our cultural conversation. With more than six thousand entries,The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy is that invaluable source. Wireless technology. Gene therapy. NAFTA. In addition to the thousands of terms described in the original Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, here are more than five hundred new entries to bring Americans' bank of essential knowledge up to date. The original entries have been fully revised to reflect recent changes in world history and politics, American literature, and, especially, science and technology. Cultural icons that have stood the test of time (Odysseus, Leaves of Grass, Cleopatra, the Taj Mahal, D-Day) appear alongside entries on such varied concerns as cryptography, the digital divide, the European Union, Kwanzaa, pheromones, SPAM, Type A and Type B personalities, Web browsers, and much, much more. As our world becomes more global and interconnected, it grows smaller through the terms and touchstones that unite us. As E. D. Hirsch writes in the preface, "Community is built up of shared knowledge and values -- the same shared knowledge that is taken for granted when we read a book or newspaper, and that is also taken for granted as part of the fabric that connects us to one another." A delicious concoction of information for anyone who wants to be in the know, The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy brilliantly confirms once again that it is "an excellent piece of work . . . stimulating and enlightening" (New York Times) -- the most definitive and comprehensive family sourcebook of its kind.

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Interesting desktop reference for young students

My eighth-grade son told me he had an assignment that he couldn't finish until he got to school the next morning because he had to look something up in the Cultural Literacy dictionary. I thought he was trying to pull one over on me, but I gave him the benefit of the doubt and told him he could only use this excuse once.

A few days later he told me he used a special favor with his school librarian and was able to bring this book home. Huh? You mean he wasn't kidding me before? So I flipped through the pages to see what this was. I was shocked that he had assignments where he actually had to look something up in a paper book instead of Googling it. OK son, you have my attention.

So he walked me through it and explained to me why he needed this reference book for his assignments. He showed me a few examples of references he had used for projects where the references used cultural terms he was unfamiliar with, like D-Day and the League of Women Voters. He explained that the reference book he was using was just a little mature for him, but that he could look up some of these unfamiliar issues, define them, and cite their definitions in his paper and then continue on with his research.

Wow. I would have expected kids his age to just bluff their way through the assignment.

So no more calling in favors with the librarian. I bought him his own copy for home. I can't believe any of my kids are using actual physical desktop references anymore, but I really love it. Although the definitions are a little simplistic in some cases, they give him enough of a frame of reference to be able to continue on with work without having to look up every single new item online.

This book is great for young students. I imagine it would be useful for foreign students too. I guess it would be great for space aliens and time travelers too. It's really a great way for anyone who is unfamiliar with today's common cultural references to quickly define the term and "get it" like the rest of us.

I realize this physical book will become dated before too long, but at least it covers common references from now through the past.
23 people found this helpful
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The good is the enemy of the great

With a bit of effort, this book could've been great. But instead it is mediocre.

The problems:
1) It doesn't have an entry for every U.S. president. This should be basic knowledge for all Americans. There are only 44 of them, only 10 more than NFL teams, and fewer than the 50 states (which again, every American should know by heart).

2) No specific dates. People and events are dated quite generally: a twentieth century author, a sixteenth century painter, etc. Giving precise dates would have taken up less space and provided more exact information

3) It's Eurocentric and heavy on WWII. Sure, a lot of things happened in Europe and during WWII, but a lot of things happened elsewhere, too.

4) No sections on sports or entertainment. While these may not be particularly scholarly topics, they are a huge part of our culture.
15 people found this helpful
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You need this book

This book blew my mind. I picked it expecting either something excessively pedantic with a hard-to-stomach emphasis on high culture, or something that entirely failed to live up to its ambitious title. I found neither. This marvelous book contains 6,900 brief entries on interesting and often excitingly convenient pieces of information that one can otherwise accumulate only by living on the planet for a very long time. I was familiar with an easy majority of the entries, but I learned something new in almost every one. I found the scope and depth of the material presented to be well balanced, and the entries well chosen. What amazed me most about the book, however, was how frequently I was awed by the rate at which I was learning. On every page, I was able to fill gaps in my knowledge - some that irked me every time I picked up a newspaper, watched a movie or read a book, and others that I did not know I had.

The book is organized into chapters by category. Categories include history, politics, geography, anthropology, business and economics, physical sciences, earth sciences, life sciences, medicine and health, technology, the bible, mythology, proverbs and idioms, literature, conventions of English and fine arts. The business and economics section, as well as the politics and medicine sections were among my favorites.

If you can complete the New York Times Sunday crossword puzzle in under ten minutes, this book is not for you. If you can't, I insist that you buy this book immediately. Highly recommended.
10 people found this helpful
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A Childs' Dictionary

I would suggest that the prospective buyer check "Look inside this book" before you add it to your cart. If you already know who Abraham and Isaac, Adam and Eve, and Angels are, there might not be too much here for you.
8 people found this helpful
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Great resource, BUT...

On the whole, I like this book very much. It is packed with a wealth of information on all sorts of topics, and it can be especially useful for people who want to fill specific knowledge gaps or to broaden their knowledge base without having to go too far in-depth in any one particular area (trivia buffs, take note). I imagine it can also be very useful as a means of encouraging cultural literacy in young people, especially when schools focus so heavily on passing reading and math standardized tests.

However... I strongly feel that this book should be regarded as a STARTING point and not a definitive "end" reference in itself. As other reviewers have noted, there are real shortcomings, not the least of which is the heavily Eurocentric focus. Partly this is explained by the authors in the preface and introduction, in which they lay out their rationale for choosing items for inclusion: "Only those items that are likely to be known by a broad majority of literate Americans ought to appear in this dictionary." Fair enough, but it differs somewhat from the subtitle of the book, which reads, "What Every American NEEDS to Know." "What people "need to know" is, of course, debatable.

Then there is the issue of accuracy. Even though I haven't gotten too deeply into the book, I've already seen two factual errors: one member of Monty Python is given as "Graham Chapin" (the last name is really "Chapman"), and Sarajevo is said to have hosted the "1982 winter Olympic Games" (it was actually 1984; no Olympics of any kind were held in 1982). Also, the book notes that the Mayas built pyramids, but under the entry for "Pyramids," only the Egyptians are mentioned. But most of what I've read so far seems sound. Still, errors like these are reminders that no reference work is perfect, and that if you really need to know something definitively, you should check in more than one place. (I find "The Reader's Encyclopedia" very useful, and even Wikipedia, with all its vulnerabilities, is surprisingly accurate.)

I understand that a book like this cannot possibly be complete, that gaps are inevitable, and that we could all argue morning and night about what should and shouldn't be included. But readers should be aware of these caveats, especially if they want to use it as a reference work for educating children. In the end, though, I think the book's strengths do outweigh its weaknesses, and I am happy to have it on my shelf. I'm always looking to learn more, and this book is a fine place to start digging.
5 people found this helpful
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Indispensable

I bought the first Dictonary of Cultural Literacy as an undergraduate and recently had to update to this one. Whatever edition you have, keep it on your coffee table.

This book is loaded with info that you've always wondered about but never got around to checking out. It has sections on religion, philosophy, literature, history, idioms, geography, and much more. I find myself returning to it again and again. Sometimes I'd use it for term papers when I wanted a "brief" run down on a topic before doing the heavy research. Now that I'm out of school, it comes in handy when I'm doing research for a book; it's also fun to flip through it and learn oddball facts.

This reference book is handy for term papers, writing projects, or simply to become a more well-rounded human being. Highly recommended.

Also recommended: How to Lose Your Faith in Divinity School
4 people found this helpful
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A Student's Guide to Everything

If you don't have immediate access to the internet, look it up in this book. It will give you a thumbnail description of almost any subject. It won't be detailed, but it will have the gist of what you may need to know. This book is the off-shoot of a previous book entitled "Cultural Literacy, what every American needs to know". Read it as well, if you are majoring in education, or any related subject.

Both should be required reading for anyone contemplating teaching as a profession. As a college instructor myself, I can tell you that your students will come to you with practically no knowledge of history, geography, politics, government, philosophy, arts, or literature if they were educated in America's public school system. The challenge you face trying to educate them is monumental. These two books will help you to get a head start on knowing what you need to do.

Rene Navarre, MBA

Instructor, Remington College
3 people found this helpful
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Everyone should have one copy in their home.

We were suggested to buy this dictionary because my daughter is now on the Scholar Bowl Team for her school and the teacher said this is the best recourse we could get. I think that this dictionary should be in every home. It has just enough information about every single subject in it that it is to darn neat not to own. I am going to get a copy for my step kids eventually but I do not want their mother to think porly of me, it is just a awesome book.
2 people found this helpful
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Great reference

I bought this book to prepare for the foreign service officer exam. Its a great "quick" historical and cultural reference.
2 people found this helpful
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Great read!

Excellent for nerds like me.
1 people found this helpful