The MOOCS that laid the Golden Egg

True fact: America once had thousands of auto manufacturers.

When the horseless carriage craze swept the nation, carriage makers in cities across the country shifted gears, as it were, to become automobile makers instead.  An ad for “The American Carriage Directory” in The Automotive Manufacturer (Vol. 43), published in 1902, boasted listings for 36,000 carriage and wagon manufacturers in the United States.  Even if no more than 10% of those manufacturers had decided to throw in their lot with the changing technology, that would still amount to 3,600 automakers in America at the dawn of the 20th century!

Then Henry Ford figured out how to mass produce cars cheaply.  A couple decades later under Harley Earl, the “Da Vinci of Detroit,” General Motors began making them longer, lower, wider.  Internal combustion engines won out over steam and electric.  And eventually America exchanged the infinite variety of its carriage-maker-in-every-city automakers for the too-big-to-fail Detroit Big Three, two of which wound up declaring bankruptcy and needing bailouts from the federal government after the 2008 economic crash.

The first time I ever thought about how many automakers America once had, and then lost, was about 15 years ago, when I read a wonderful book, Roadster: How, and Especially Why, a Mechanical Novice Built a Roadster from a Kit, by Chris Goodrich.

This is a book you will really, really like if:

  • you’re a generalist/jack-of-all-trades
  • OR you love cars
  • OR you remember and love the 1960s cult-classic television show “The Prisoner”

Goodrich weaves together three very different threads—losing his job and trying to figure out his place in the employment world, building a Caterham 7 roadster from a kit, and reflecting on the themes of “The Prisoner”—to produce an insightful take on what it means to be a generalist in a world that increasingly demands that people pick their niche and stay there (i.e., “branding”).

What made me think of this book now, after so many years?

In skimming through my news feeds last week, I came across a blog/article in the March 25, 2013, New York Times, “Beware of the High Cost of ‘Free’ Online Courses,” by Steve Lohr.  Many universities, especially elite schools, are making courses available for free online.  These offerings do not carry university credit, but companies like Coursera are developing business models aimed at exploiting the gap and finding a way to profit by connecting students learning from open courseware with buying university certification.

In the article mentioned above, Michael A. Cusumano, a professor at M.I.T.’s Sloan School of Management, warns that the end result of a MOOC (Massive Online Open Course) onslaught may be a few huge winners and many, many educational institutions forced to close.  Here are some direct and partially paraphrased quotes from Cusumano in the article:

“My fear is that we’re plunging forward with these massively free online education resources and we’re not thinking much about the economics.”

MOOC champions . . . are well-intentioned people who “think it’s a social good to distribute education for free.”

“Free is actually very elitist.” . . .  The long-term future of university education along the MOOC path . . . could be a “few large, well-off survivors” and a wasteland of casualties.

Dr. Cusumano warns in an article of his own, “Are the Costs of ‘Free’ Too High in Online Education?” that the rush to “free” online courseware may spell doom for what is (in my opinion) the best higher-education system in the world:

I am mostly concerned about second- and third-tier universities and colleges, and community colleges, many of which play critical roles for education and economic development in their local regions and communities.

In addition, “free” in the long run may actually reduce variety and opportunities for learning as well as lessen our stocks of knowledge.

Will two-thirds of the education industry disappear?  Maybe not, but maybe!  It is hard to believe that we will be better off as a society with only a few remaining megawealthy universities.

If two-thirds of our nation’s colleges and universities disappear, what will this mean?  How will the short-term benefits of open courseware extend into a future where only a few (presumably privileged) students are granted personal interaction with actual professors, face to face?  For example, can a capacity for critical thought, a key 21st-century skill, be developed by merely watching lectures on video?

I don’t know.  But if and when such drastic change to the underlying infrastructure occurs, for better or worse, there will be no turning back.

Although I am a fan of free markets, I think that there is risk in believing that business principles can and should be applied to all problems.  The 2006 Spellings report on higher education (the salvo setting off a barrage of calls for reform since then) was particularly marred by this assumption:

What we have learned over the last year makes clear that American higher education has become what, in the business world, would be called a mature enterprise: increasingly risk-averse, at times self-satisfied, and unduly expensive.  It is an enterprise that has yet to address the fundamental issues of how academic programs and institutions must be transformed to serve the changing educational needs of a knowledge economy.  It has yet to confront the impact of globalization, rapidly evolving technologies, an increasingly diverse and aging population, and an evolving marketplace characterized by new needs and new paradigms.

History is littered with examples of industries that, at their peril, failed to respond to—or even to notice—changes in the world around them, from railroads to steel manufacturers.  Without serious self-examination and reform, institutions of higher education risk falling into the same trap, seeing their market share substantially reduced and their services increasingly characterized by obsolescence.

See what I mean about how the language itself reveals the way business blinders narrowed the Spellings Commission’s path of vision.  Enterprise?  Market share?  Obsolescence?

Yes, higher education needs reforms.  But viewing higher education as a product/industry similar to railroads and steel manufacturing is a mistake.  How can the quality of a liberal education be measured by the usual benchmarks of progress and productivity?  The nature of this problem can be better understood by considering a lesser-known principle of economics, Baumol’s cost disease, also called the Baumol Effect.

Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, speaking in favor of appropriations for the National Endowment for the Arts in September 1997, brilliantly explained Baumol’s disease as it applies to productivity in the arts (which would include the practical arts of medicine and teaching as well as the fine arts):

The productivity of personal services does not grow, or grows very slowly compared to the productivity generally in the economy.  You could put it this way.  In 1797, if you wished to perform a Mozart quartet, you needed four persons, four stringed instruments, and 43 minutes.  Two centuries go by and to produce that stringed quartet you need four persons, four stringed instruments, and 43 minutes.

If the great Mormon Temple Choir undertook to do a Bach oratory when it was founded, I believe there are 350 members of that choir, so to do a Bach oratory in 1897, that would take 350 musicians an hour and a half.  A century goes by and it still takes 350 persons and an hour and a half.  That is called Baumol’s disease.  If you play the “Minute Waltz” in 50 seconds, you speed up productivity but you do not get quite the same product.

That is why teachers are relatively more expensive than farmers.  Farmers have quadrupled and quintupled and quintupled again their productivity, but a first-grade teacher can handle about 18 young 6- or 7-year-olds in 50-minute classes; you can put 190 kids in that class and it would not be the same.

That is why we always have friction in our economy between those activities where we depend very much on the personal services and those which involve the mechanized or the electronic services—think what we have seen in productivity in computation in the last twenty years.

What machines can do best, machines should do.  What people can do best, people should do.

One charge leveled at universities is that they are medieval institutions, like that is a really bad thing to be.  Well, yes and no.  Interestingly, mechanizing routine aspects of higher education may end up transporting us back to the Middle Ages anyway, but with a 21st-century twist.  An excellent article from 2011, “Back to the future for higher education: Medieval universities,” by Michael D. Byrd, posits that online learning, technology, “global” campuses, and superstar teachers will return today’s colleges to their original, centuries-ago form.  Maybe that will be a good thing.  Maybe it won’t.

Let me tell you two stories.  The first is true; the second is not.

Once there was a small town in America that had few locally-owned retail stores.  When the townspeople wanted to do big shopping, they had to visit the mall in a big city about an hour’s drive away.  However, the town did have a good craft-supply and fabric store, and because many local residents did crafts and sewed their own clothes, they were glad to have such a nice store conveniently located in their small town.

Then one day a big-box retail store opened on the outskirts of town.  Townspeople were excited to discover such variety at such low prices right there in their own backyard.

They still shopped at the local fabric store, perhaps out of habit, perhaps out of loyalty, or perhaps because the fabric store still had the best selection in town.  It wasn’t long, however, before the big-box retailer expanded its own fabric and crafts department.  The new store’s stock was bountiful, its prices incredibly low.  People could hardly believe their good fortune.  Such a bonanza!  All of this, right there in their small town!

Everyone flocked to the big-box store.  The original fabric and craft-supply store could not compete.  Eventually it closed.

Can you  guess what happened next?  That amazingly bountiful fabric and crafts department in the big-box retailer immediately shrank to almost nothing.  Prices rose.  The townspeople had even less selection than ever before, but now they paid more for it.

The second story is a fable by Aesop.  Although not true, it nonetheless contains a truth that transcends fact.

Once there was a man who owned a goose.  Every day the goose laid a golden egg.  The man reasoned that surely an enormous lump of gold must be concealed inside that goose.  Why should he wait for it to be laid, one inefficient egg at a time?  Much better to have the entire amount immediately.  So the man killed the goose.  But when he cut her open, he discovered to his dismay that she was no different on the inside than any other goose.  In his determination to gain a larger good in the short term, the man had deprived himself of the smaller good he could have depended on every day for the long term.  Now he had nothing but a dead goose.

Today’s post is a jumbled collection of idea snapshots, I realize.  But this is how my mind works.  It is my job as a liberal arts professor to put forth all these little pieces of trivia I’ve collected over the years and then ask questions in a way that brings a variety of viewpoints and voices together in conversation to reveal solutions to problems requiring insight.

Are MOOCs the answer to the high cost of live interaction in brick-and-mortar classrooms?  Are we as a society better off with the mass-produced, longer-lower-wider automobile from a too-big-to-fail manufacturer than with a locally-produced automobile from the shop of a carriage-maker craftsman?  How do we measure “productivity” in an educational setting?  (Hopefully not using a metric of cost-effectiveness like the University of Texas ratio of faculty salary to number of students taught!)

All these are questions in need of serious discussion.  I don’t know the answers.  But were I pressed to provide an Aesop-style “moral” for today’s post, it might be this: Caveat emptor.

* * * * * * * *  ###  * * * * * * * * *

~ P.S. ~ If you are interested in this topic, you may also want to read the post I wrote last June about the forced resignation and subsequent reinstatement of University of Virginia president Teresa Sullivan.  Similar issues surfaced there from the disconnect in values between academic and business worldviews over how to approach higher-education reform.

Posted in Higher education, History, Teaching, Technology, WPLongform (posts of 1000 words or longer) | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

“Hawks Do Not Share”: Re-reconsidering Zelda Fitzgerald

I’m not sure why, but a slew of books is being published right now about Zelda Fitzgerald, wife of F. Scott.  Here is an article/ book review from the March 22, 2013, Wall Street Journal that discusses several of the new (fictional) offerings.

I can’t find any notable anniversaries in Zelda’s life to explain all these books, a hook to hang them on, so to speak.  Perhaps this surge of interest is tied in with the new Leonardo DiCaprio remake of The Great Gatsby, due for release on May 10.  (Isn’t the poster, below, a beautiful Art Deco piece?)

Zelda Fitzgerald has fascinated me for years, ever since I read Nancy Milford’s 1970 biography, Zelda, as a teen.  (That book had a gorgeous peacock-feather dust jacket I’ve never forgotten, and I was just now able to find the author, title, and publication date to share with you today thanks to nothing more than a quick Google search for “Zelda biography peacock.”  I love the Internet 🙂 )

So here’s the thing that started me thinking.  All these new books seem to present a very PC-revisionist view of Zelda as the poor, abused spouse of F. Scott Fitzgerald, a man who stole her work and presented it as his own.

Maybe.  I don’t really know, and it’s doubtful that anyone can ever really know what happened inside that drama-filled marriage of two such troubled creative people.  But in “Hawks Do Not Share,” a chapter in A Moveable Feast, Ernest Hemingway paints a damning portrait of Zelda that I find both chilling and believable.  Whether or not it’s true is almost beside the point.

Artists often struggle in their personal lives.  As someone whose primary interest is studying creativity from an academic point of view, I’m always curious about the cause-and-effect relationships involved in the making of great art.  Hemingway presents a sad picture of Fitzgerald trying to work and being sabotaged by Zelda.  Not until Zelda was certifiably insane was Scott able to discount some of the damaging things she’d convinced him of and recover an ability to focus on the work again.

In creative fields, it’s all about the work.  One of the first things we learned in graduate school, in fact, was:  You’ve got to protect the work.  You need to protect the time slot in your schedule during which creative work can happen.  That’s hard.   It means the work has to come first, get just about the highest priority, be placed at the very center of your existence, and everything else revolves around that.

Establishing a successful, long-term “creative” life requires that you sustain a boring, routine “real” life.  It’s that maintenance that’s tricky; otherwise, the spark flares too brightly and burns itself out.

In the case of Zelda and Scott, each person seemed to amplify the decadent impulses of the other, resulting in an extravagantly excessive lifestyle that in some ways came to symbolize the 1920s.  Ultimately it was the melodrama of their daily life that ruined the Fitzgeralds, creatively and otherwise.

Posted in Books and reading, History, Movies and film, Writing, blogging | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Invisibility Cloak Research Moves Forward at Michigan Tech « CBS Detroit

Invisibility Cloak Research Moves Forward at Michigan Tech « CBS Detroit.

Not just for Harry Potter or Sam and Frodo anymore!  Actually, the research hasn’t gone quite that far yet, but still . . . this is a really cool, futuristic piece of news.

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Learning to focus is our next digital challenge

Will the Internet, with all its abundance, prove to be a distracting road to perdition or the “straight and narrow” pathway that leads humanity to its highest potential?

Here’s a link to an excellent article, “You’re distracted.  This professor can help,” from The Chronicle of Higher Education yesterday (March 24, 2013) about how teachers are using age-old techniques for mindfulness and contemplation to help students develop discernment in their technology habits.

If nothing else, the article makes a convincing argument that educators have a responsibility for helping students reflect on the way they engage with technology:  Do they control technology, or does it control them?

Neither extensive knowledge of a technology’s functionality nor astonishing skill at manipulating it can automatically confer the judgment and wisdom necessary to master it.

Posted in Life, Teaching, Technology | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Living the dream, one doughnut at a time

"One doughnut at a time." katherinewikoff.com

“Cheers!”

I met my writing buddy, Lisa, for coffee this morning at our favorite spot, Cranky Al’s in Wauwatosa (an older Milwaukee suburb).  Both of us are busy working moms, struggling to balance all of the other demands on our time with our work as writers. 

We try to meet once a month to read each other’s work and offer feedback and encouragement.  Sometimes one of us will have had a more productive month in terms of pages, while the other will have read a great book or gone to a conference and can share insights from those experiences.  It’s the moral support of a kindred spirit that keeps me finding ways to fit the work into the nooks and crannies of my day.

Often when I’m writing, I think about Lisa as my reader.  Will she like this word choice or the logical way I’ve structured this sequence of thought?

Or I think of the women in my writing group: Jo, Karen, Donna, Kathleen, and more recently Jessica and Anne.  I’ve known the first four women for over 20 years now.  We’ve been together through numerous novels, plays, poetry, articles, and even a screenplay, not to mention births and deaths and cancer and just about anything else life can throw at you. 

How fortunate I am to have met all these women!  Not only are they friends in real life; they’ve also been most cherished companions in the life of my imagination. 

Writers need other writers in their lives, just as artists need other artists and musicians need other musicians, if only to validate our own idiosyncratic ways of “being” in the world.

The title of today’s post?  That’s our new motto, courtesy of Cranky Al’s, where the pizza is delicious, too.

Posted in Life, Writing, blogging | 3 Comments

I’m back (hopefully . . .)

Here’s what happens sometimes when I’m not even trying.

katherinewikoff.com

I have been away from blogging for over a month because my offline responsibilities have claimed the lion’s share of my attention.  Family, job, that sort of thing.

Part of the problem, too, is that I’ve gotten into the habit of writing long posts.  Although I’ll definitely continue doing that, I can also see that my perfectionism has kept me from posting at all.  So, inspired by Sheryl Sandberg’s advice to “lean in,” I’ll try to focus on gettting something up a couple times a week, even when I don’t feel I have anything “perfect” enough to share.

It’s called a blog, after all.  Short for web log and originally meant to be an online diary.  Not a literary magazine or a professional journal.  Just little snippets.

I think I can handle that.

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January raindrops

January raindrops 

Today we are supposed to hit a record-high temperature of around sixty degrees.  Heavy fog during the night and early morning gave way to rush-hour rain.  By the time I took this photo, right before teaching my first class of the day, the rain had stopped, leaving beads of water speckling the window of our department office.

Although I can’t make the picture any bigger on this page, if you click on the photo itself, you can enlarge it to see the droplets in clearer detail.

In typical Wisconsin fashion, today’s predicted high of 60˚ will be followed by Friday’s predicted low of −2˚.

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Affect versus effect: which is which?

In commenting on the dash–hyphen post a couple days ago (and that’s an en dash between the words “dash” and “hyphen” 🙂 ), Kathleen suggested that I write a post about “affect” and “effect.”  Great idea!  Using “affect” and “effect” correctly can be tricky because each word can be both a verb and a noun.  So here goes.

Usually “affect” is a verb, and “effect” is a noun.  Affect is the action, and effect is the thing resulting from that action.  When something affects something else, it causes an effect.

One way to remember this is that “a” comes before “e” in the alphabet, and something has to Affect something else to cause an Effect.  The “a” word happens first, and the “e” word happens second.  The “e” word is a result of the “a” word.  So if you’re writing about a thing that has been caused by something else, then the word you want is “effect.”

The bad weather affected people’s moods.

One effect of the bad weather was grumpy people.

The bad weather affected people’s moods.  After that “affecting” occurred, there was an “effect” (which was grumpy people).  Also, notice that the “e” word happens second (as a result of the action); but it doesn’t necessarily have to go second in terms of word order within the sentence

In addition, the words “of” and “on” are often associated with “effect.”

One effect OF the bad weather . . .

The bad weather’s effect ON people was . . .

One effect the bad weather had ON people was . . .

What makes “affect” and “effect” harder to keep straight is is the fact that sometimes “affect” is a noun and “effect” is a verb.  These are used in pretty limited contexts though.

“Affect” as a noun is a term from psychology, referring to a feeling or emotion as opposed to a rational thought.  You would rarely use “affect” as a noun in ordinary writing situations, I’m guessing.  The place I’ve seen it used most is in fiction when, for example, an author describes a character’s emotionless tone of voice by saying it has a “flat affect.”

“Effect” as a verb is much more common than “affect” as a noun.  Fortunately, though, it is used in an extremely narrow sense.  When used as a verb, “effect” means to create, to make, to bring into existence.  It is often used together with the word “change,” as in to “effect change.”

NOTE: I have often seen affect/effect misused in this context.  To “effect” change is to “create” change.  To “affect” change would be to “influence” change.  For example, someone could negatively “affect” change by slowing it (change) down.  But someone could negatively “effect” change by creating bad laws that could hurt people.

Sometimes “effect” is used as a noun that almost seems derived from the word as a verb.  To say that a law takes “effect” on a certain date means that the law comes into existence on that date.  The law may have already been “effected” (created) by the legislature, but it doesn’t officially exist until the date it takes “effect” or becomes “effective.”

The main thing to remember with “affect” and “effect,” though, is that in almost every case you’d ordinarily use these words, “affect” will be a verb meaning to influence or modify, and “effect” will be the noun that follows from this influencing or modifying.

“A” before “e.”

Does that make sense?

Posted in Grammar, punctuation, usage, mechanics | Tagged , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Hyphen or dash: What’s the difference, and when to use which?

Here’s a punctuation “issue” that people have asked me about lately: what’s the difference between a hyphen and a dash, and when do you use which?

Difference #1 — a hyphen is short, and a dash is long.  In Morse code, hyphens would be like the “dots” while dashes would be like, well, the “dashes.”

Difference #2 – a hyphen pulls things together, but a dash pushes them apart.

In the olden days of typewriters, if you had to split up a word at the end of a line, you “hyphenated” it (at a syllable break only!) to “pull” the word together from the end of one line to the beginning of the next.

A line might look some-

thing like this

Hyphens are used to create adjectives from two words:

An old-fashioned ice-cream social

A well-deserved honor

A time-sensitive document

Hyphens also pull together compound nouns before they become commonly accepted as one word.  For example, the noun “make-up” is now usually spelled “makeup.”

(Disclaimer: make sure you’re using “makeup” as a noun, as in cosmetics, if you leave out the hyphen.  If you use it as verb, it’ll be two words: I have to “make up” a test.  If it’s an adjective, it’ll be hyphenated: I have to take a “make-up” test after school.)

For a long time electronic mail was referred to as E-mail or e-mail; now I most commonly see it as “email.”  So if you can remember this progression from 1) two separate words to 2) a hyphenated word to 3) one single, new word, then it may be easier to remember what a hyphen does: it pulls things together.

Dashes, however, push things apart.  There are two kinds of dashes (who knew?), one short and one long.  The shorter dash is called an en dash; the longer is called an em dash.  They are named for the letters “n” and “m.”  An “n” is shorter (one hump) than an “m” (two humps).

Here’s a handy visual to show the differences in length:

Hyphen vs dash

The en dash is used either to show a range of numbers or to indicate a relationship pair; it replaces the word “to” or “and”:

Do the problems on pages 61–70 for homework.

World War II (1940–1945) truly spanned the globe, with battles fought on several continents and at least two oceans.

The Army–Navy game is always must-see viewing in our house.

That last sentence used both an en dash (to indicate the pair of rivals) and a hyphen to create the adjective that describes what kind of viewing (must-see) occurs.  Often you might see a hyphen incorrectly used to punctuate the Army–Navy game.  But Army and Navy aren’t two terms getting pulled together to create one whole new concept, as in American-style football.  Army and Navy are the two rival teams competing in this event; they are distinct from each other, so they need the dash to maintain their separation/distance.  It’s the Army and Navy game, like the current Presidential administration is the Obama–Biden (Obama and Biden) administration.

Em dashes are used to forcibly separate ideas within a sentence—like this.  I could have used a comma to accomplish the separation, like this.  But using a dash calls attention to the words “like this.”  Like commas or parentheses, em dashes used in the middle of a sentence come in pairs:

Using dashes in the middle of a sentence—like this—provides a much stronger break (and, thus, emphasis) than using commas.

Sometimes it’s a nice stylistic twist to open a sentence with a list, and then use a dash to close the list and follow it with the thing that all of the listed items constitute:

Wife, mother, confidante, assassin—Mary juggled many roles in her life.

(Where did that come from?  Too many thrillers and mystery novels, I guess.)

Here’s how to make en and em dashes in Microsoft Word.  Probably there are more elegant ways than this, but I haven’t found them.

To make an en dash: After typing the last character before the en dash, type a space by hitting the space bar.  Then type a hyphen.  Type another space.  Then type your next numeral or word.  Type another space.  As soon as you hit the space bar following the second numeral or word, the hyphen you typed will turn into an en dash.

To make an em dash: After typing the last word or character before the em dash, immediately type two hyphens, right next to each other in a row.  Don’t type a space before those hyphens, as you would if you wanted to make an en dash.  After typing your two hyphens, immediately type your next word.  Then type a space.  As soon as you type the space after the word that followed your two hyphens, the two hyphens will turn into an em dash.

(Update: As soon as I published this post, I realized that the more “elegant” way to make en and em dashes would probably be to “insert” them as symbols.  I had never thought of doing that before, duh.  So I checked, and sure enough found ’em!)

So I think that about does it for hyphens and dashes.  Hope this is helpful 🙂

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As inauguration nears, check out the Smithsonian’s “First Ladies” exhibit

As preparations accelerate in advance of of President Obama’s second inauguration on Monday (which is also Martin Luther King, Jr., Day), one of the biggest stories coming out of Washington is Michelle Obama’s new “bangs” hairstyle.  I bring this up not to trivialize Mrs. Obama’s overall achievement and intellect.  She is an attorney, which is to say the that the gray matter under those bangs is pretty formidable.

But the attention generated by her hairstyle change reminds me of Hillary Clinton, also an attorney, who changed her own hairstyle many times seemingly in response to press criticism of her liking for headbands back in 1992.  Now, as she finally leaves behind her own powerful positions as a U.S. Senator and Secretary of State, I am glad to see her return to that long-haired style she apparently always preferred to the various bobs and dress-for-success short haircuts I suspect she adopted to shut up the media sniping.

While it’s annoying that women’s appearance continues to attract such intense interest — especially when the women in question are so intelligent and accomplished — there must be something in our human nature that compels us to focus on hair and clothing as some sort of marker, even as some better part of us acknowledges how superficial it is.

Which brings me to my main reason for posting today.  I came across a reference to the First Ladies exhibit at the Smithsonian and got way too sidetracked by the photos of First Ladies’ evening wear.

One of Martha Washington’s gowns is there (below)

as are gowns worn by many other First Ladies either to Inaugural Balls or to other White House functions.  Looking at their dresses is like looking at snapshots of fashion history.

Dolly Madison’s gown (below) is fashioned in the Empire style associated with the first wife of Napoleon Bonaparte, Joséphine de Beauharnais, and more recognizable to us moderns as that style worn by the Bennet sisters in our many film productions of of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.

Mary Todd Lincoln’s gown (below) has the full, pouffy skirt of the Civil War era.

The dresses of Lucy Hayes and Frances Cleveland (respectively, below) have the bustles so popular in the 1880s.

Florence Harding’s early 1920s dress (below) corresponds with the end of the floor-length-dress era for women’s daily attire.

The First Lady who followed her, Grace Coolidge, wore a flapper-style gown (below) reflecting the rise of the modern woman as the first quarter of the 20th century came to a close.

If you’d like to experience more of the Smithsonian’s First Ladies exhibit, go to http://americanhistory.si.edu/first-ladies/introduction.  There are many additional photos, and the discussion is fascinating.

(For the record, I like Michelle’s new hairstyle.)

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