{"id":6129,"date":"2001-06-01T01:11:00","date_gmt":"2001-06-01T01:11:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost:8888\/cite\/\/general\/article2-htm-16"},"modified":"2016-06-04T02:39:15","modified_gmt":"2016-06-04T02:39:15","slug":"article2-htm-16","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/citejournal.org\/volume-1\/issue-3-01\/social-studies\/article2-htm-16","title":{"rendered":"Leveraging Constructivist Learning in the Social Studies Classroom: A Response to Mason, Berson, Diem, Hicks, Lee, and Dralle"},"content":{"rendered":"

One of the newer phenomena associated with the technology age is the advent of the e-mail joke circuit. Many people simply delete these forwarded messages, considering them yet another nuisance in their harried lives. When I have time, and with selectivity as to sender, I read these jokes and pass them along, much to the chagrin of some family members and friends. One set of jokes I received on May 24, 1999, as the millennial buzz was gathering momentum, seems like a good way to begin my commentary on’ Guidelines for Using Technology to Prepare Social Studies Teachers,’ published in this journal (Mason, Berson, Diem, Hicks, Lee, & Dralle, 2000). Despite the antiquity of their origin in computer-time, these jokes still seem apt.<\/p>\n

The header on the message ran: ‘Signs That You Have Had TOO MUCH of the ’90s.’ It’s only fair to credit my source here, Mary Murrin of the New Jersey Historical Commission, an outstanding purveyor of online jokes. Perhaps these jokes appeared on your computer too. Among the nuggets of e-mail joke circuit wisdom were the following:<\/p>\n