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Berrett, Dan – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
An undergraduate education is traditionally supposed to provide students with both breadth and depth of knowledge, which derive from their general-education requirements and major, respectively. Increasingly, education experts also want students to develop a third skill, integrative thinking. It entails learning the deeper, underlying meaning of a…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Majors (Students), Interdisciplinary Approach, Undergraduate Study
Gattiker, Thomas F.; Lowe, Scott E. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Electronic textbooks, often lauded as a cheaper alternative to hard copies, may also seem like a perfect way for colleges to reduce their greenhouse-gas emissions. Many institutions encourage use of e-books, and one state, California, has required that all textbooks used in college classes be made available electronically by 2020. In a sign of…
Descriptors: Internet, Textbooks, Educational Technology, Electronic Publishing
Berrett, Dan – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
During a review of undergraduate programs at the University of California at Los Angeles, Judith L. Smith, vice provost for undergraduate education, was struck by an uncomfortable realization: Too many majors demanded too little from students. Some students could graduate without ever taking a senior seminar or completing a substantial research…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Undergraduate Study, General Education, Student Research
Fischer, Karin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Sun Yat-sen University's East-meets-West curriculum is distinctive, but its embrace of liberal education--education across disciplines, meant to provoke broad thinking--is far from unusual. At a time when China and its East Asian neighbors are trouncing U.S. students on international exams, educators in these countries are nonetheless adopting,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Curriculum, Liberal Arts, General Education
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Engineering and teaching are among the most lopsided disciplines in academe's gender split. In 2010, women received 80 percent of the undergraduate degrees awarded in education, the U.S. Education Department reports. And they earned 77 percent of the master's and 67 percent of the doctoral degrees in that field. In engineering, by contrast, women…
Descriptors: Females, Spatial Ability, Majors (Students), Gender Discrimination
Lewington, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
At Canadian universities, business schools are light-years ahead of the rest of the campus in raising their global profile. Intensive foreign-student-recruitment efforts, friendly Canadian immigration rules, mandatory study-abroad requirements, and, in some cases, the option to pursue programs in multiple languages have combined to pack a punch in…
Descriptors: Business Administration, Business Administration Education, Student Recruitment, Foreign Countries
Wasley, Paula – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Entrepreneurial ingenuity and risk taking may seem like traits that can't be taught, but colleges are increasingly attempting to do just that--and they are doing so in nontraditional contexts. Long a staple of business and M.B.A. programs, and of some engineering programs, courses in kick-starting new companies are now taking hold in research…
Descriptors: Campuses, Research Universities, Undergraduate Study, Entrepreneurship
Katz, Stanley N. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
How should one think about assessment in general education--or what is sometimes called liberal education--in the pluralistic environment of American higher education? Generalizations about longitudinal collegiate assessment are difficult, not least because of the remarkable range of four-year institutions and the students who attend them.…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, General Education, Outcomes of Education, True Scores
Strout, Erin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
The young adults choosing careers today watched as the Twin Towers fell, as Katrina swept onto land, and as the Asian tsunami left devastation in its path. They have led protests against the genocide in Darfur. And they spent most of their teen years with the United States at war. Those same young adults--many of them college students--have seen…
Descriptors: Credentials, Undergraduate Study, Young Adults, Nonprofit Organizations
Shusterman, Noah – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
In this article, the author, a lecturer in Temple University's intellectual-heritage program, explains why colleges are teaching undergraduates the wrong Freud. Though the book "Civilization and Its Discontents" (1930), which most professors use, is Freud's most consistent and most convincing attempt to apply psychoanalytic theory to society as a…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Psychiatry, Undergraduate Study, Instructional Materials
McLeod, Kembrew – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
In this article, the author talks about his "educational prank" where six corporations "sponsored" his undergraduate course during the fall of 2006. He also contends that the "cutting workforce and extracting more labor for less compensation may increase the bottom line of corporations, but it's no way to run a university,…
Descriptors: Corporations, Liberal Arts, Undergraduate Study, School Business Relationship
Carlson, Scott – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
As American manufacturing moves increasingly overseas and immense growth is forecast in modernizing countries like India and China, engineers need to understand those cultures before designing products for them, say supporters of international-engineering programs. The Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET), which accredits…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Engineering Education, Study Abroad, International Studies
Zimmer, Marc – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
There are two main settings for puzzle solving in higher education: graduate programs, with professors and both graduate and postdoctoral students; and predominantly undergraduate institutions, with professors and students. Research programs at large universities are well-oiled puzzle-solving machines. Graduate students there work long, hard hours…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, College Faculty, Undergraduate Students, Models
Overland, Martha Ann – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
The University of Western Australia is the latest of a half-dozen Australian institutions to drastically overhaul its academic programs, in a move to bring its degrees more in line with global standards, as well as ensure it remains attractive to prospective students. The universities are essentially parting ways with the British system and moving…
Descriptors: Graduate Study, Undergraduate Study, Law Schools, Labor Market
Wilson, Robin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
This article focuses on gender gap as a current trend in student population among schools. The author presents an honors course in statistics at Elon University--a class of 10 women and just one man--as an example. The imbalance is becoming more familiar at Elon and on many other campuses where women constitute a firm majority of undergraduates…
Descriptors: Females, Honors Curriculum, Gender Differences, College Students
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