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Susan Blum

Anthropology

Office
E284 Corbett Family Hall
Notre Dame, IN 46556
Phone
574-631-3762
Email
sblum@nd.edu

Professor of Anthropology

  • Cultural, linguistic, and psychological anthropology
  • Deception and truth
  • Multilingualism
  • Person and self
  • Ethnicity, nationalism and identity
  • Childhood and higher education
  • Morality
  • Well-being
  • Justice
  • Sustainability and food
  • Anthropological theory
  • China and Asia, the U.S.
  • Cross-cultural comparison

Blum in the News

As learning management systems dominate, and students juggle competing priorities, Susan D. Blum asks, where is the joy, the adventure, the meaning?

OPINION: Susan D. Blum is a professor of anthropology at the University of Notre Dame, holding concurrent appointments as a fellow in the Kellogg Institute for International 91视频, the Liu Institute for Asia and Asian 91视频, the Institute for Educational Initiatives, the Eck Institute for Global Health, and the William J. Shaw Center for Children and Families.

“The answer is always the same: yes. You can use it, but you have to cite it because you didn’t write it,” said Susan Blum, a professor at the University of Notre Dame whose scholarship has focused on plagiarism and educational anthropology. 

“Plagiarism is the use of someone else’s words or ideas without giving them credit,” says Susan Blum, an anthropology professor at Notre Dame and the author of My Word! Plagiarism and College Culture.

“I don’t believe in churning everything through turnitin.com because that’s a mechanical way of doing things,” says Susan Blum, a professor of linguistic anthropology at Notre Dame, referencing a go-to anti-plagiarism tool.

We asked three experts who have researched and written about plagiarism and other academic-integrity issues to shed light on these and other questions. They are Susan D. Blum, an anthropology professor at the University of Notre Dame and author of My Word!: Plagiarism and College Culture...

A recent collection on the subject, edited by Susan D. Blum, a professor of anthropology at the University of Notre Dame, features lively essays by teachers who’ve all put their particular stamp on the practice of de-emphasizing or abolishing grades.

Since the 2020 release of Ungrading: Why Rating Students Undermines Learning (and What to Do Instead), the book’s editor, Susan D. Blum, a professor of anthropology at the University of Notre Dame, has given a steady stream of presentations about ungrading, most of them over Zoom. 

Susan D. Blum is a professor of anthropology and a fellow at the Kellogg Institute for International 91视频 at the University of Notre Dame.

But as Susan D Blum's linguistic anthropology class found out, it makes having a natural conversation practically impossible.

鈥淚 like to phrase it as 鈥榯he central work of faculty is facilitating learning,鈥欌 says Susan D. Blum, a professor of anthropology at the University of Notre Dame and editor of聽Ungrading: Why Rating Students Undermines Learning (and What to Do Instead).

Susan Blum, a professor who specializes in linguistic anthropology at the University of Notre Dame, says Zoom fatigue was inevitable given how unnatural conversational patterns can get there: 鈥淰ideo calls do not allow any conversational overlap. You can鈥檛 say 鈥榤mm-hmm鈥 to assent because that would interrupt and put you on screen as the main speaker.鈥