Publication Date
| In 2015 | 0 |
| Since 2014 | 0 |
| Since 2011 (last 5 years) | 339 |
| Since 2006 (last 10 years) | 2266 |
| Since 1996 (last 20 years) | 3856 |
Descriptor
Author
| Wilson, Robin | 162 |
| Jaschik, Scott | 151 |
| Blumenstyk, Goldie | 145 |
| Young, Jeffrey R. | 118 |
| Mangan, Katherine S. | 112 |
| Hoover, Eric | 91 |
| Schmidt, Peter | 86 |
| Carlson, Scott | 82 |
| Mooney, Carolyn J. | 81 |
| Lederman, Douglas | 78 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
Showing 136 to 150 of 6,054 results
Jenkins, Rob – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Facing a cutthroat academic job market, many doctoral students are now willing to explore the possibility of a community-college career. And they have many questions. In Part 1 of this series, the author focused on the hiring process at two-year colleges and answered some common questions like "Do I have to have a Ph.D. to teach in that sector?"…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Graduate Students, Labor Market, Doctoral Degrees
Gonzalez, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
The national push to graduate more students excludes no demographic group, and those with lagging completion rates become particular targets of attention. Now some community colleges are zeroing in on another underserved population: ex-offenders. Roughly 1.6 million people are in state and federal prisons across the country, and each year, about…
Descriptors: Correctional Education, Criminals, College Graduates, Community Colleges
Fischer, Karin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Students in the University of Rhode Island's International Engineering Program (IEP) spend a semester studying at an overseas university and another six months interning at a company abroad; at the end of five years, they earn two degrees, in engineering and a foreign language. Despite the extra academic demands, nearly a third of Rhode Island's…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Engineering Education, Engineering, International Education
Perlmutter, David D. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
If a person managed to finish his work--whether it was research, teaching, or service--on time and in the correct format, he would have a huge competitive advantage over many of his peers. Procrastination is not always bad: Sometimes the work one puts off doing is better left undone. And sometimes the best ideas just come late. But perennially…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Doctoral Programs, Tenure, Time Management
Brown, Ryan – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
With youth unemployment in South Africa hovering around 50 percent and close to half the population living in poverty, a university degree has come to be seen by many as the only way out. And universities are straining under the burden: This admissions cycle, the University of Johannesburg alone rejected more than 70,000 applicants in filling an…
Descriptors: College Graduates, Adult Education, Futures (of Society), Foreign Countries
Perlmutter, David D. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Showing that one really "wants" the job entails more than just really wanting the job. An interview is part Broadway casting call, part intellectual dating game, part personality test, and part, well, job interview. When there are 300 applicants for a position, many of them will "fit" the required (and even the preferred) skills listed in the job…
Descriptors: Job Applicants, Employment Interviews, Communication Skills, Communication Strategies
McKinnon, Rachel – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
This article shares how the author explained her trans status to her students. Everyone has been extremely supportive of her decision to come out in class and to completely mask the male secondary-sex characteristics, especially in the workplace. The department chair and the faculty in general have been willing to do whatever they can to assist…
Descriptors: Gender Issues, Human Body, Personal Narratives, Social Bias
Zingales, Luigi – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Economists may be biased in ways that are not apparent to many. A widely espoused theory in economics is that regulators' decisions often become biased in favor of the industries they regulate; to use economic jargon, they become "captured." Economic incentives encourage even the best-intentioned regulators to cater to the interests of the…
Descriptors: Economics, Professional Occupations, Professional Identity, Bias
Basken, Paul – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
A two-year Congressionally mandated assessment of financial threats to the nation's research universities ended on Thursday with the offer of a grand bargain: Cut costs and form more partnerships with communities and industry, and expect increased revenues and fewer regulations. A report on the study, coordinated by the National Research Council…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Industry, Costs, Graduation Rate
Mole, Beth – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
When Brad R. Simpson visited the University of Connecticut for a job interview in February, he was struck by a vibe that he finds increasingly rare on college campuses. People, he says, were optimistic. At a time when he encounters many demoralized professors, as campuses across the nation slash budgets and freeze hiring, the University of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Personnel Selection, Campuses, Faculty Development
Berrett, Dan – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
No matter the college, a class in the principles of microeconomics is likely to cover the discipline's greatest hits. The author attends three economics courses at three colleges, and finds three very different approaches. In this article, the author discusses three colleges' different approaches that shape learning in Econ 101.
Descriptors: Economics Education, Microeconomics, Higher Education, Teaching Methods
Biemiller, Lawrence – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
On July 2, 1862, Abraham Lincoln signed Justin Morrill's second agriculture-school bill into law. Along with another measure he championed, in 1890, it created a system of land-grant colleges that rooted agriculture firmly in university research and helped democratize American higher education, creating institutions not for the sons and daughters…
Descriptors: Land Grant Universities, Higher Education, Research Projects, Agriculture
Patton, Stacey – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
As the nation's student-loan debt surpasses the $1-trillion mark, alarming students, parents, and politicians, few are thinking about the effects it is having on people like Michael J. Trivette, a 28-year-old graduate student in higher education at the University of Georgia. Two-thirds of Ph.D. and other doctoral students and nearly three-quarters…
Descriptors: Graduate Study, Student Loan Programs, Graduate Students, Enrollment Rate
Lang, James M. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Traditional college campuses need to capitalize more effectively on the facts that they are a physical presence within a natural environment; that their presence plays host to many people working and living together in myriad formal and informal communities; that those communities are driven by educational, philosophical, economic, and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Campuses, Physical Environment, Laboratories
Labi, Aisha – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Patrick McGhee, vice chancellor of the University of East London, has a lot in common with many of the 28,000 students at the large urban institution he leads. He was the first in his family to attend university. And he dislikes much about the government's higher-education reform efforts, which he has deemed "misguided, premature, unproven and…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Educational Change, Foreign Students, Tuition

Direct link
