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Emily J. Levine; Mitchell L. Stevens – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
For two centuries, academics and their universities have competed for prominence and vied to demonstrate that their institutions are at the center of the scholarly world. Scientific advances in particular fields, reciprocal academic visits and conferences, impressive physical architecture, and publishing in shared venues and a "lingua…
Descriptors: Competition, Higher Education, Reputation, Institutional Characteristics
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Barrett J. Taylor; Brendan Cantwell – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2024
Existing scholarship tends to understand university governance structurally (emphasizing formal authority and resource environments), culturally (focusing on history, norms, and leadership), or by combining both approaches (Kezar & Eckel, 2004). These models understand governance in instrumental terms, as the means for steering the university.…
Descriptors: Universities, Governance, Cultural Context, Administrative Organization
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Hacer Tercanli; Ben Jongbloed; Barend van der Meulen – European Journal of Higher Education, 2024
University-based living labs serve as open innovation platforms that foster collaborative research and experimentation across various disciplines. These labs bring together academics, citizens, community organisations, companies, and other entities to collectively address complex contemporary issues. The labs' managers are expected to adopt…
Descriptors: Universities, Program Administration, Modern History, Social Problems
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Nuria Chaparro-Banegas; Alicia Mas-Tur; Norat Roig-Tierno – Cogent Education, 2024
For many years, technological developments and innovations such as artificial intelligence (AI) has forced the education system to adapt and modernise. This new reality requires people to develop critical thinking (CT) skills to promote sustainable development and provide solutions to contemporary problems. However, traditional learning and…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Artificial Intelligence, Educational Practices, Influence of Technology
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Rhody-Ann Thorpe – Prism: Casting New Light on Learning, Theory & Practice, 2022
Universities in the English-speaking world may trace their origins to England, where the first universities of Oxford and Cambridge were established. These universities were, for centuries, the models for universities to come both in terms of structure and philosophy; and they also became a tool of British colonial policy. With the progression of…
Descriptors: Universities, Colonialism, Postcolonialism, International Relations
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Rospigliosi, Asher; Bourner, Tom – London Review of Education, 2019
This article explores the origins of researcher development in British universities. Its principal aim is to provide a coherent, and reasonably succinct, account of the evolution and development of researcher development that is as consistent as possible with what is known about the development of the Western university, the history of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Research Skills, Skill Development, Researchers
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Caruso, Marcelo – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2014
Not only in education, but also in other social practices, the history of "internationalisation" is correlative to the history of "nationalisation". In this broad sense, this article outlines four main constellations of the links between education and nationalisation/internationalisation dynamics. After a brief description of…
Descriptors: Educational History, Global Approach, International Education, Nationalism
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Matthew Casey; Rebecca Tuuri – History Teacher, 2018
Although geographically rooted in the Southern United States, the U.S. poultry industry is best understood in a transnational, or even global, perspective that can be difficult to address in regionally bounded courses. In intellectual terms, the topic straddles a number of historiographic subfields that have steadily grown in recent decades. These…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, African American History, Latin American History, Class Activities