Bowdoin’s History
…allegations of excessive “liberalism” by the professoriate don’t reveal much, absent more information about hiring patterns. That said, a striking aspect of the subfields listed by Bowdoin’s history professors is…
…allegations of excessive “liberalism” by the professoriate don’t reveal much, absent more information about hiring patterns. That said, a striking aspect of the subfields listed by Bowdoin’s history professors is…
Herb London and KC Johnson have already posted on the disappointing findings of the ACTA project What Will They Learn? But it is worth pondering some of the implications of…
…don’t understand the power imbalance between women and men.” I said, “You don’t understand the legal equality for which women have fought.” All fundamental fairness disappears from campus judicial systems…
…warning to those of you who don’t yet have such programs on your campus. You’ll see why the threat to all schools is real. Until very recently, those who ran…
…Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. After attending a conference on teaching and learning in 2004, Plopper had an epiphany of sorts, and now uses Bloom’s Taxonomy to assess student learning in his two…
…one student,” said TSU provost Dennis Gordon, “How many resources do you allocate to courses like that? Apparently whatever is necessary, according to the commentator in Wired magazine who called the decision “really…
…and speakers for the camp will include UVA faculty, graduate/undergraduate students and professional women engineers. Campers will work closely with a wide variety of women engineerings [sic], and learn why these women love what…
…disappears when students choose early college.) “Just because the twelfth grade may not be fully utilized to its potential by many students doesn’t necessarily mean it should be done away…
…to criticize the success of some who don’t live up to their expectations of high-mindedness and sophistication, all the while defending their right to do so. This is well and…
…see what’s going on in his head,” says Turner. “Where was he going with this? People with normal thought patterns don’t do this. As we’ve seen, the argument that high-pressure…
…Fe may be right (but don’t mistake St. John’s as “conservative.”) If you aren’t put off by the idea of physical remoteness and you are ready for a rigorous liberal…
…and medicine accounted for the largest category of targeted donations. Campus building projects and student scholarships also ranked high for wealthy donors and their family foundations. Yet is was equally…
…responses to her questions by a Muslim student who had visited a Jewish temple. Dayna Goldstein of Georgia Southern University, however, admitted that her paper “Our Post-Humans Relations Don’t Understand…
…are talking about distance learning and other electronically-mediated forms of instruction, they are happening on their own, and they will clearly “expand opportunity.” Anyone eager to learn can find an…
…fair to say that person has some qualities that aren’t possessed to the same degree by people who don’t often do intelligent things, at least not without prompting, and who…
…states in proportion to their population, so institutions of higher learning, Chace seems to believe, should represent America’s racial and ethnic groups according to a population-proportionality principle. He doesn’t try…
…If an institution devotes enormous efforts and resources to improve both the numbers and status of its women, you don’t have to be a rocket scientist to get the idea…
…former) friend to whom she sent the private message: “Please don’t pull a Larry Summers on me.” From the Summers affair grew an environment marked by intellectual inhibition on certain…
…moral/political diversity; and we have created a hostile climate for graduate students who don’t share those sacred values.” Haidt concluded his address with a plea that social psychology develop a…
…would keep more women in STEM fields. The idea behind the research is that certain strategies “inoculate” female students against the sense that they don’t belong or are not likely…
At Columbia, how is it that the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” could inspire such heated debate among students? The average student opposing the return of the Reserve Officers’…
…undergraduates who prefer history-rich accounts of WW II versus, say, a lecture on why country A attacked country B using the Prisoner’s Dilemma format. But don’t even think of hiring…
…from bribery. But in those same places, colleges and universities are usually state-funded and don’t have to go hat in hand looking for private money. Corrupt as the practice of…
…next. People considering graduate school with their B.A.’s—the graduate schools don’t tell them what it’s really like. They don’t tell them what it costs and what they’ll have to endure….
…students work little in college and consequently learn little. Most of us who have been in higher education for decades know that this is true, even when we don’t want…
…Against Professors Who Don’t Utilize Technology. The students complain: “Don’t you hate it when you sign up for a class that SHOULD be really interesting, and it becomes your worst…
…charges for tuition and room and board. British students don’t. American students customarily work at low-level summer jobs or even at part-time jobs during the academic year to contribute to…
…denigrate the past in order to make the case for the sweeping social change that they want. That’s why they don’t look at the past and see accumulated knowledge and…
…100 list of Liberal Arts colleges in 2010. Graduates of HBCUs don’t make as much money, on average, as their equivalents who went to mainstream schools. To many, all of…
…exams. Here was History professor Charles Maier: “A lot of people said, ‘I don’t want to go through that.’ They didn’t say it openly. But it probably was a factor.”…