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Showing 1 to 15 of 34 results Save | Export
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Shippen, Nichole Marie – Journal of Political Science Education, 2020
Maintaining an active research agenda while teaching full-time at a community college can be daunting, but with institutional support for scholarly research by way of course release it is possible. This personal reflection offers up evidence of institutional support from a variety of sources within the public university system of New York City,…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, College Faculty, Teacher Responsibility, Teacher Researchers
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Rhoades, Gary – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2011
In this article, the author addresses questions about the future of faculty unions, business models, and the academy by providing some current and historical context regarding the causes of and conflicts about faculty unions. He also reviews trends in college and university management over the past three decades, using California, Ohio, and…
Descriptors: Unions, College Faculty, Futures (of Society), Conflict
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Rhoades, Gary – Liberal Education, 2012
From one state to another, boards of trustees, legislatures, and governors are implementing policies designed to increase output and efficiency in public colleges and universities. Many such policies reflect the agenda of the National Governors Association's Complete to Compete initiative, which seeks to increase completion rates without…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Investment, Research Universities, Public Colleges
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Gunn, Joshua; Lucaites, John Louis – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2010
In this article, the authors discuss the contest of faculties on discerning the politics of social engagement in the academy. They begin by noting that the relationship between scholarship and social engagement is by no means obvious or unproblematic. They know, for example, that there are less conspicuous forms of scholarly engaged activities…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Social Action, Activism, Citizen Participation
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Page, Max; Clawson, Dan – Thought & Action, 2009
In 2002, during yet another budget crisis produced in large measure by the state's tax-cutting mania, Massachusetts proposed a massive cut in the university's budget. Through an early retirement incentive, the state wanted to reduce the faculty by 10 percent. No one was prepared to fight back. Despite UMass Amherst's long history of activism, and…
Descriptors: Unions, College Faculty, Activism, Faculty College Relationship
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Emery, Kim – Thought & Action, 2009
Traditionally, academic freedom has been understood as an individual right and a negative liberty. As William Tierney and Vincente Lechuga explain, "Academic freedom, although an institutional concept, was vested in the individual professor." The touchstone document on academic freedom, the American Association of University Professor's (AAUP)…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, College Faculty, Institutional Autonomy, Government School Relationship
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Holden, Robert H. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2009
Modernity has imposed on many of us, and perhaps especially on academics, a habit of silence with regard to what John Rawls called deeply held "comprehensive" moral beliefs. According to Rawls and his many disciples, the survival of liberalism depends upon the bracketing of comprehensive beliefs whenever we step into the public sphere. And in the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Political Attitudes, Moral Values, Public Colleges
Sanders, Steve – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
A case pending in a federal court of appeals in California may clarify a surprisingly murky question: Do faculty members at public universities enjoy a special privilege to speak freely about institutional matters, or, as far as the First Amendment is concerned, are they just another category of government hirelings? Juan Hong, a professor of…
Descriptors: Federal Courts, Constitutional Law, College Faculty, Public Colleges
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Kolodny, Annette – Academe, 2008
Given the financial burden they are taking on, parents and students are not interested in debates over tenure or academic freedom lest these distract them from the immediate goal of preparing to earn a living. Overburdened undergraduates-- students working twenty to forty hours each week to pay the bills and still taking out student loans--greet…
Descriptors: Tenure, Academic Freedom, Liberal Arts, College Faculty
Aronowitz, Stanley – Liberal Education, 2006
In this article, the author claims that the steady corporatization of American higher education has threatened to relegate faculty governance, never strong, to the historical archive. In public institutions, faculty disempowerment has been codified by law--legislatures, the governor or county executive or their staff, or state boards of higher…
Descriptors: Unions, Governance, Higher Education, College Faculty
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Tullis, K. J.; Camey, John P. – Journal of Education for Business, 2007
In recent years, the competitive environment for business education has been rapidly changing. Although 1st-tier schools and colleges of business generally resolved accreditation issues long ago, other institutions are increasingly considering specialized accreditation as a strategic tool in the competition for students and institutional prestige.…
Descriptors: State Universities, Public Colleges, Business Education, Course Content
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Prioleau, Darwin – Journal of Dance Education, 2004
Given the present economic and political climate, how can dance programs in colleges and universities continue to thrive? Recently there has been a national movement to return to the roots of the original altruistic mission of the public university and the land grant legacy. In other words, a movement toward, engagement. Engagement involves a…
Descriptors: Dance, Educational Experience, College Faculty, Higher Education
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Jurenas, Albert C.; Zhang, Chunsheng – West's Education Law Reporter, 1990
Faculty who criticize their academic employers have attempted to expand the doctrine of academic freedom to insulate themselves from institutional retribution. Examination of a number of court decisions discloses that most faculty lose their challenges. Advises faculty to examine their claims and personal vulnerability before bringing suit. (MLF)
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, College Faculty, Court Litigation, Faculty College Relationship
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Kaplan, Sheila – Educational Record, 1991
The 1990s will not be easy for public college faculty, administrators, and governing boards, who will be expected to do more with less money and fewer resources, but bear criticism for cutting back. Simultaneously, society will make greater demands for preparation of the next generation of professionals. The educational establishment must…
Descriptors: College Administration, College Faculty, Educational Finance, Educational Quality
Hunt, Gary T. – 1993
Outside demands on universities to improve the manner in which they operate have placed increased pressure on faculty members to examine how they spend their time. Because administrators often resist any pressure to change the way they do business, faculty often find themselves in a situation of adjusting to a changing set of values and reward…
Descriptors: College Administration, College Faculty, Educational Quality, Faculty Workload
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