|
Product Description
Readers of Making Sense of the College Curriculum expecting a traditional academic publication full of numeric and related data will likely be disappointed with this volume, which is based on stories rather than numbers. The contributors include over 185 faculty members from eleven colleges and universities, representing all sectors of higher education, who share personal, humorous, powerful, and poignant stories about their experiences in a life that is more a calling than a profession. Collectively, these accounts help to answer the question of why developing a coherent undergraduate curriculum is so vexing to colleges and universities. Their stories also belie the public’s and policymakers’ belief that faculty members care more about their scholarship and research than their students and work far less than most people.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Checklist for Change: Making American Higher Education a Sustainable Enterprise
- Assessment for Excellence: The Philosophy and Practice of Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education (American Council on Education, Series on Higher Education) (The ACE Series on Higher Education)
- The College Fear Factor: How Students and Professors Misunderstand One Another
- A Third University Is Possible (Forerunners: Ideas First)
- Funds of Knowledge in Higher Education
- Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom (Harvest in Translation)
- Degrees of Inequality: Culture, Class, and Gender in American Higher Education
- The Education Gospel: The Economic Power of Schooling
- Demographics and the Demand for Higher Education
- Selling Hope and College: Merit, Markets, and Recruitment in an Unranked School
*If this is not the "Making Sense of the College Curriculum: Faculty Stories of Change, Conflict, and Accommodation" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Dec 27, 2024 12:35 +08.