Loyola University Chicago

Department of Sociology

Faculty

Marilyn Krogh, PhD

Title/s:  Associate Professor
Graduate Program Director

Specialty Area: Urban Sociology, Poverty, Quantitative Methods

Office #:  Coffey 428

Phone: 773.508.3471

Email: mkrogh@luc.edu

CV Link: CV_Krogh_Marilyn

About

Dr. Marilyn Krogh earned a PhD in sociology from the University of Chicago in 1995, and has been on the faculty of Loyola University Chicago since then. Her primary research interests are inequality in labor markets and urban sociology, and her secondary interests are in religion and the scholarship of teaching and learning. Dr. Krogh teaches part of the required sequence of courses for the undergraduate major in sociology, (research methods, statistics and the senior seminar), as well as introduction to sociology, urban sociology, and poverty and social welfare. At the graduate level, she teaches urban sociology, as well as leads a seminar on teaching.

Dr. Krogh is also the Director of the interdisciplinary Urban Studies program at Loyola. The program in Urban Studies, open to undergraduates of all majors, now offers not only the Urban Semester and related courses, but also an 18 credit hour interdisciplinary minor. During the six-credit hour Urban Semester at Loyola's Center for Urban Research and Learning (CURL), participants join teams of faculty, graduate students and community leaders to look closely at Chicago neighborhoods and urban policies. They address current issues from a community's perspective with a goal of promoting positive social change. Interested? Contact Dr. Krogh for more information.

Degrees

The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL
PhD in Sociology, 1995

The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL
MA in Sociology, 1986

Wheaton College, Wheaton, IL
BA in Political Science, 1978

Program Areas

Opportunities for Students

Dr. Krogh welcomes students who would like conversation or personal assistance with their research projects. She regularly assists undergraduates who write honors papers in the senior seminar course, and she has advised several who have gone on to win the Mulcahy Fellowship at Loyola. Dr. Krogh also serves on the thesis committees for graduate students who are pursuing projects that range from the politics of steel cities, to mothering in Cuba, to Christian teaching on personal finance. And, for graduate students who are new instructors, she is happy to provide resources and support. Please feel free to contact her at mkrogh@luc.edu.

Research Interests

During her graduate work at the University of Chicago, Dr. Krogh was a member of the Urban Poverty and Family Structure Study, led by William J. Wilson. As a member of that study, she did fieldwork in the Humbolt Park neighborhood of Chicago, and helped design and analyze the Urban Family Life Survey. She has written two articles based on that survey, one titled, "Why Work Disappears Faster for Black Men in the Inner City," and the other titled, "Hispanic Men in an Inner-City Labor Market: Segments, Networks and Deindustrialization."

Dr. Krogh has collaborated with Dr. Christine George, Senior Research Fellow at CURL (Center for Urban Research and Learning) on an evaluation of STRIVE (Support and Training Results in Valuable Employees), a non-profit job training and placement program here in Chicago. Dr. Krogh has also collaborated with a former student, Brooke Ashley Pillifant, to write two articles about a new religious movement called Kemetic Orthodoxy. Her article, "A Skill, Process and Person-Oriented Graduate Seminar on Teaching" has been published in Teaching Sociology.

Selected Publications

Forthcoming

Krogh, Marilyn and Ashley Pillifant. 2004. "The House of Netjer: A New Religious Community Online." Religion Online: Finding Faith on the Internet. Lorne Dawson and Douglas Cowan, (eds). Routledge USA.

Krogh, Marilyn and Ashley Pillifant. 2004. "Kemetic Orthodoxy: Ancient Egyptian Religion on the Internet." Sociology of Religion.

Krogh, Marilyn. Review of Faith in Action: Religion, Race and Democratic Organizing in America, by Richard L. Wood, Contemporary Sociology.

Currently Available

Krogh, Marilyn. 2000. "A Skill, Process and Person-Oriented Graduate Seminar on Teaching." Teaching Sociology 28:333–345.

Krogh, Marilyn. 2000. Selections in Preparing Graduate Students to Teach: Syllabi and Related Material from Graduate Courses on the Teaching of Sociology. 3rd edition. Kimbery A. Mahaffy, (ed). Washington, DC: American Sociological Association.

Testa, Mark and Marilyn Krogh. 1995. "The Effect of Employment on Marriage Among Black Males in Inner-City Chicago." Pp. 59–95 The Decline in Marriage Among African Americans, M. Belinda Tucker & Claudia Mitchell-Kernan, (eds). New York: Russell Sage Foundation.

Testa, Mark, Nan Astone, Marilyn Krogh and Kathryn Neckerman. 1989. "Ethnic Variation in Employment and Marriage among Inner-City Fathers." The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 501:79–91.

Under Review

Krogh, Marilyn and Christine George. "STRIVE: A Trusted Intermediary in the Low- Wage Labor Market."

Krogh, Marilyn. "Hispanic Men in an Inner-City Labor Market."

Krogh, Marilyn. "Why Work Disappears Faster for Black Men in the Inner City of Chicago."