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The Daily Pennsylvanian is the University of Pennsylvania's Independent Student Newspaper
Issue date: 5/2/08 Section: News

Students say Kal Penn's Asian American studies class was a hit

Participants praised the blending of typical teaching methods with personal experiences

Priyanka Dev

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Kal Penn speaks at the Penn Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology during a rally for Sen. Barack Obama this past month. This week marked the end of his time as a Penn professor.
Media Credit: Lionel Nicolau
Kal Penn speaks at the Penn Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology during a rally for Sen. Barack Obama this past month. This week marked the end of his time as a Penn professor.
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Actor Kalpen Modi-more fondly known as Kal Penn - conquered Hollywood after his hit movie Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle. But, with students raving about his Asian American Studies class as the semester ends, it seems Modi has conquered something perhaps more significant than teenage humor: the field of academia.

"I was a little skeptical at first about what credentials gave him the right to teach a class at Penn," said a College senior and Cinema Studies major who requested anonymity because all students enrolled in the class signed a waiver saying they would not talk to non-class members about its content.

"By the end of the class, I realized it wasn't his academic credentials that got him here, it was his experience in the field - which is equally valuable," she said.

Modi, who served as an adjunct professor in the Asian American Studies Department, taught ASAM 109: Images of Asian Americans in the Media this past semester. His interest in teaching at Penn stemmed from the lectures he had given about how race and gender identity play out in the media, in addition to Penn's robust ASAM program which Modi discovered last November.

"What I really found most interesting was the ability to take the experiences that I had as an actor and find how they were socially relevant," Modi told The Daily Pennsylvanian earlier this semester.

Despite juggling the teaching stint with filming for the FOX hit TV series "House," Modi was accessible and took a keen interest in his role as a teacher, according to his students.

He scheduled multiple office hours on various days and organized group lunches at which smaller groups of students from the approximately 80-person lecture class could sit down with him to discuss class material and Modi's life experiences.
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Alum

posted 5/07/08 @ 1:58 PM EST

can somebody please explain this paragraph to me:

"I was a little skeptical at first about what credentials gave him the right to teach a class at Penn," said a College senior and Cinema Studies major who requested anonymity because all students enrolled in the class signed a waiver saying they would not talk to non-class members about its content. (Continued…)

Student

posted 5/07/08 @ 11:00 PM EST

A WAIVER not to discuss course content?! This is a clear attempt by the professor to shield himself from any further criticism stemming from his obvious lack of academic credentials. (Continued…)

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