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Showing 1 to 15 of 113 results Save | Export
Lindsey, Ursula – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
In Tunisian and Egyptian universities, scholars face a growing Islamist resolve to remake their countries on the basis of religious principles. Both Tunisia and Egypt face questions that could affect higher education across the Middle East and North Africa: Can their new Islamist governments spread conservative religious values and also create…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Arabs, Foreign Countries, Modern History
Williams, Jeffrey J. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Before all the talk about "public intellectuals," Michael Walzer was one. For 50 years, he has gone back and forth between positions at Princeton and Harvard Universities and then at the Institute for Advanced Study, in Princeton, New Jersey, where he is now emeritus. His writings appear regularly in "Dissent" magazine, which he has co-edited for…
Descriptors: Criticism, Foreign Countries, Theory Practice Relationship, Career Development
Parry, Marc – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
The e-mail drill was one of numerous mind-training exercises in a unique class designed to raise students' awareness about how they use their digital tools. Colleges have experimented with short-term social-media blackouts in the past. But Ms. Hill's course, "Information and Contemplation," goes way further. Participants scrutinize their…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Internet, Electronic Mail, Consciousness Raising
Sander, Libby – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Matthew Reilly's roundabout journey to college took a painful, decisive turn after a nighttime crash in Iraq. In 2008, six months into his first combat tour with the Army, Mr. Reilly and nine soldiers from his platoon were pursuing an insurgent when their armored fighting vehicle slammed into a roadblock. It was 2 o'clock in the morning, and fresh…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Head Injuries, Veterans, College Students
Carey, Kevin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has invented or improved many world-changing things--radar, information theory, and synthetic self-replicating molecules, to name a few. Last month the university announced, to mild fanfare, an invention that could be similarly transformative, this time for higher education itself. It is called MITx.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Universities, Online Courses, Credentials
Van Brunt, Brian – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
In this article, the author makes an unpopular argument that involves the necessity for college counselors and psychologists to work harder with a high-risk group of students. He argues that an ideal, successful, well-functioning college counseling center must serve a wide range of clients. He wants to push back on the latest trend in the…
Descriptors: Counseling Services, Guidance Centers, School Psychologists, Colleges
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
In academe, the game of how to win friends and influence people is serious business. Administrators and grant makers want proof that a researcher's work has life beyond the library or the lab. But the current system of measuring scholarly influence does not reflect the way many researchers work in an environment driven more and more by the social…
Descriptors: Research, Scholarship, Internet, Citation Analysis
Rocca, Francis X. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Over the past quarter-century David Petrie, a 56-year-old Scotsman has attended, in the capacity of plaintiff or interested observer, at least 80 court hearings at various levels of the Italian and pan-European judicial systems--all in cases of alleged job discrimination by Italian universities. In the process, Mr. Petrie has become the public…
Descriptors: Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Court Litigation, Foreign Countries, Foreign Nationals
Cassuto, Leonard – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Richard Wright's literary career begins with a lynching and ends with a serial murderer. "Big Boy Leaves Home," the 1936 story that leads off Wright's first book, "Uncle Tom's Children" (1938), renders the vicious mob-execution of a young black man falsely accused of rape. "A Father's Law," Wright's last novel, left unfinished at his unexpected…
Descriptors: United States History, United States Literature, Social Attitudes, Authors
Blumenstyk, Goldie – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
In his first book, "Acts of Faith," Eboo Patel describes his early encounters with interfaith events in the late 1990s. He was not impressed. "They were excruciatingly boring," he writes. Why so much talk and so little action, his restless, twenty-something self had wondered. "And where were the young people?" Fast forward a dozen years. Now 37,…
Descriptors: Religion, Intergroup Relations, National Organizations, Religious Education
Downs, Donald A. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Tensions between the military and the university are hardly new or surprising; after all, the two institutions embrace different cultures, procedures, and purposes. But they managed to coexist in a dynamic tension until the antiwar movement of the 1960s severed the relationship at many colleges, opening a gap that persists to this day. Consider…
Descriptors: Military Training, Universities, General Education, Culture Conflict
Lang, James M. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Teachers may resist the notion of teaching as a performance but his or her voice, gestures, and movement in the classroom can help or harm student attentiveness. Strong skills in voice and movement can help illuminate a teacher's questions and ideas for students, drawing attention to what matters, holding their attention through a long class, and…
Descriptors: Sentences, Form Classes (Languages), Higher Education, College Faculty
Brown, Susan; Monastersky, Richard – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
The Association of American Publishers has hired a public-relations firm with a hard-hitting reputation to respond to the open-access-publishing movement, which campaigns for scientific results to be made freely available to the public. The firm, Dezenhall Resources, designs aggressive public-relations campaigns to counter activist groups. The…
Descriptors: Topology, Periodicals, Public Relations, Scientific Research
Dotinga, Randy – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Tags such as the radio-frequency identifications or RFIDs are devices that make it possible for individuals to be tracked and their location reported back to a database. The devices--chips with radio antennas--emit signals, and tracking them reveals the movement of people or things. Many stores use the technology to catch shoplifters at exits. To…
Descriptors: Experiments, Privacy, Electromechanical Technology, State Universities
Pannapacker, William – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
A persistent criticism of the digital-humanities movement is that it is elitist and exclusive because it requires the resources of a major university (faculty, infrastructure, money), and is thus more suited to campuses with a research focus. Academics and administrators at small liberal-arts colleges may read about DH and, however exciting it…
Descriptors: Humanities, Computer Uses in Education, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes
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