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Books > Social sciences > Education > Higher & further education
This book provides perspectives from authors in six countries
(Canada, Colombia, Germany, France, UK, USA) pertaining to adult
learning in the 21st Century. This book grew out of an exciting
International Conference on Adult Learning (ICAL) held in Paris,
May 27-29, 2012. Imagine "listening in" as these international
scholars, representing expertise in various areas related to adult
education, focus their collective attention to the topic of adult
learning. Their task is to concentrate their research and
intellectual acumen on where adult learning is heading in the 21st
Century and to bring together their varied areas of expertise to
expand the field of adult education's knowledge base. This book
provides more than a record of their papers and meetings. Instead,
each author has revised their paper with symposium feedback to help
capture the discussion, synergy and growing knowledge base we
envision together. Now you can read how these leading scholars
understand adult learning in light on their collective work. Areas
of focus include Heuristics of Adult Learning Facilitating Self
Directed Learning Individuals and the Learning Process Executives'
Self-Development Distance Learning Science Self Directed Learning
for All Entertainment-Education Communication Strategy Positive
Deviance to Transform Education Learning Through the Life Course
This book will benefit teachers, researchers, administrators, and
students in the field of adult education, learning, and practice.
The synergistic result of bringing together nine scholars results
in many new practical applications, research streams, scholarship,
and practice suggestions.
During the last decade, the Internet has driven some of the most
significant changes in higher education. Since information and
communication technologies (ICTs) impact how we educate, teach, and
learn, researchers, teachers, and other stakeholders in higher
education must be prepared to meet students with uses of
educational technology that are designed with reflection and
research. Informed Design of Educational Technologies in Higher
Education: Enhanced Learning and Teaching presents recent and
important theoretical and practical advances in educational
technology design in higher education, examining their
possibilities for enhancing teaching and learning. This volume
includes discussions of technologies and applications grounded in
legitimate learning theories and from an ethical perspective that
emphasizes mutual understanding.
Building Higher Education Cooperation with the EU: Challenges and
Opportunities from Four Continents offers a detailed study of
higher education cooperation between the EU and four continents
with an examination of the challenges and opportunities. These
findings have enabled the development of a new understanding of the
internationalisation of higher education.
Early Modern Universities: Networks of Higher Education publishes
twenty essays on early modern institutional academic networks and
the history of the book. The case studies examine universities,
schools, and academies across a wide geographical range throughout
Europe, and in Central America. The volume suggests pathways for
future research into institutional hierarchies, cultural ties, and
how networks of policy makers were embedded in complex scholarly
and scientific developments. Topics include institutions and
political entanglements; locality and mobility, especially the
movement of scholars and scholarship between institutions;
communication, collaboration, and the circulation of academic
knowledge. The essays use studies of print and book cultures to
provide insights into cooperative interregional markets, travel and
trade. Contributors: Laurence Brockliss, Liam Chambers, Liam
Chambers, Peter Davidson, Mordechai Feingold, Alette Fleischer,
Willem Frijhoff, Anja- Silvia Goeing, Martina Hacke, Michael
Hunter, Urs B. Leu, David A. Lines, Ian Maclean, Thomas O'Connor,
Glyn Parry, Yari Perez Marin, Elizabeth Sandis, Andreas Sohn, Jane
Stevenson, Iolanda Ventura, and Benjamin Wardhaugh.
A veteran college dean gives parents of college students all the
practical guidance they'll need to navigate the labyrinth of
bureaucracies and policies in order to support their student's
academic career and extracurricular life. Most books for college
parents dwell on the emotional and psychological challenges when
their son or daughter "cuts loose" into the quasi-dependent,
quasi-adult limbo of college. Here at last is an expert
nuts-and-bolts guide showing parents how to work collaboratively
with their children to navigate the college bureaucracy-a labyrinth
that at times seems perversely designed to frustrate parents at
every turn, even on such basic matters as tuition and fees, grades,
and disciplinary, legal, and medical problems. Drawing on her 20
years of experience as a student affairs dean at a top-ranked
national university, Helen Akinc teaches college parents everything
they need to know about policies and practices today in college
administration, instruction, and student services. The practical
advice gathered in this handbook will empower college parents to
extract enough information from the system to support, guide, and
monitor the academic career and general well-being of their college
student-both on campus and off, in both routine and special
situations. A bibliography of suggested websites, readings, and
additional resources at the end of most chapters A comprehensive
index
Advocates of religious schooling have frequently had to answer the
charge that what they supported was un-American. In a book that is
more than just a history, Jones tries to make sense of that charge
by tracing the development of religious schooling over the last 125
years. He explores the rationale for religious schooling, not just
on the part of those who choose it for their children, but also in
terms of its impact on the community as a whole, and he considers
the arguments of those who criticize such schools for undermining
efforts to promote national unity. Near the end of the 19th
century, publicly financed, publicly administered schooling emerged
as the default educational arrangement for American children. But
this supremacy has not gone unchallenged. The sectarian schools
that, in fact, predate public education in America have survived,
even thrived, over the past century. Multiple religious
communities, including those that opposed sectarian schooling in
earlier generations, have now embraced it for their children. The
author charts the growth of this educational strategy--and the
debate surrounding it--through the 20th century by focusing on the
gradual embrace of sectarian schooling by different religious
communities in America, particularly Catholics, Jews, and later,
conservative Protestants (mainly in the form of homeschooling). He
also considers Muslim schools, not currently a force in private
schooling or the subject of much debate, but perhaps next in line
to make their case for a place in America's educational landscape.
The idea of combining face-to-face learning with some form on
online learning made sense a decade ago as it allowed much more
flexibility in delivering instruction to diverse groups of
learners. Today, blended learning has become a mainstay for
universities because of that flexibility, but more importantly,
because of the thousands of dollars that can be saved by changing
the mode of delivery so that there is much more online than
face-to-face delivery. Blended Learning across Disciplines: Models
for Implementation presents a global perspective on blended
learning and augments that perspective with examples and
applications from leading scholars around the world. It highlights
examples from the school system, from undergraduate classes, and
from graduate classes and also discusses androgogical principles as
they apply to blended learning situations.
What will higher education look like in 20 years? Will a
bachelor's degree still be viable-or even valuable? How will we
assess learning? Will it be competency based? Determined by the sum
experience of individual achievement? Or measured by student peers?
How will learning be delivered? In the classroom? Over the
internet? Or through mobile devices untethered by time and place?
And by whom? By professors dedicated to their disciplines, by
volunteers driven by a passion to share, or by new kinds of
learning communities, as yet unimagined?
This much is certain: education is changing. But today, the
higher education community is struggling with serious challenges:
budget dollars are tighter than ever; our capacity to admit
students who want an education has diminished sharply; and in the
U.S., our standing as the premier global provider of advanced
education is slipping. Imagining a new future for higher education
will require vision-a creative capacity to see what might be
possible for tomorrow's learners-and resolve-the ability to assess
risk, forge new kinds of partnerships, and move confidently toward
goals, even under difficult circumstances.
SunGard Higher Education worked closely with Dr. Ihlenfeldt over
the years as he worked tirelessly to shape a new future for
Chippewa Valley Technical College. Today CVTC boasts a nationally
recognized faculty, state-of-the art facilities and equipment,
online and blended classrooms, and partnerships with area
businesses that help to sustain a community. Visionary leadership
informed by careful analysis can make a tremendous difference in
people's lives. These are skills Bill shares with all of us in his
book, "Visionary Leadership." Its publication couldn't be timelier
and SunGard Higher Education is proud to sponsor its
publication.
The American university has embraced a thorough secularism that
makes it increasingly marginal in a society that is characterized
by high levels of religious belief. The very secularization that
was supposed to be a liberating influence has resulted in the
university's failure to provide leadership in political, cultural,
social, and even scientific arenas.
In The Decline of the Secular University, C. John Sommerville
explores several different ways in which the secular university
fails in its mission through its trivialization of religion. He
notes how little attention is being given to defining the human, so
crucial in all aspects of professional education. He alerts us to
problems associated with the prevailing secular distinction between
"facts" and "values." He reviews how the elimination of religion
hampers the university from understanding our post-Cold War world.
Sommerville then shows how a greater awareness of the intellectual
resources of religion might stimulate more forthright attention to
important matters like our loss of a sense of history, how to
problematize secularism, the issue of judging religions, the oddity
of academic moralizing, and the strangeness of science at the
frontiers.
Finally, he invites the reader to imagine a university where
religion is not ruled out but rather welcomed as a legitimate voice
among others. Sommerville's bracing and provocative arguments are
sure to provoke controversy and stimulate discussion both inside
and outside the academy.
A volume in Research in Second Language LearningJoAnn Hammadou
Sullivan, Series EditorIn 2002, this series was launched with its
first volume, Literacy and the Second LanguageLearner, which
contained many noteworthy research studies in the learning
andteaching of second language reading. The selection of this theme
for the series' entry onthe scene demonstrates the importance of
the topic of second language reading. Becausereading plays a key
role in the act of acquiring new knowledge, it is important to
understandthis complex process. The series again explores this
multifaceted and fruitful areaof inquiry in this, its seventh
volume. In recent years, an explosion of work that strivesto create
a more complete understanding of second language reading has
occurred andresearchers today are making gains in fitting together
a model of second language reading.This current volume brings
together a range of high quality analyses of adult foreign language
reading across languages andresearch methods. It provides important
research findings that will assist foreign language readers and
those who supporttheir efforts.
This wonderful collection of humorous, poignant, and revealing
stories and anecdotes offers special insight into the university
that Father Malloy has served so faithfully. Monk's Notre Dame has
a story to tell about nearly every aspect of life at Notre Dame.
Father Malloy intersperses fresh insight on traditional campus
events, such as new students moving into the residence halls and
the annual bookstore basketball tournament, with lesser-known
stories such as the mysterious disappearance and dramatic
reappearance of a statue of Father Edward Sorin at the helm of a
motorboat on St. Mary's Lake. Father Malloy also presents charming
vignettes about the people who have made Notre Dame the place it
is. He offers a personal tribute to the legendary Reverend Theodore
M. Hesburgh and includes warm and witty stories about other C.S.C.
priests and brothers, such as Charles Doremus ("Father Duck") and
Brother Cosmas Guttly, who lived to be 99. Memorable anecdotes
about professors, students, and "behind the scenes" workers are
also captured in this book. Anyone who has studied, taught, worked,
or been interested in the University of Notre Dame will find Monk's
Notre Dame delightful.
Changing Higher Education for a Changing World draws on the
outcomes of the cutting-edge research programmes of the UK-based
Centre for Global Higher Education, the world's largest social
science research centre focused on higher education and its future.
In countries with incomes at European levels, the majority of all
families now have connections to higher education, and there is
widespread popular interest in how it can be made better. Together,
the contributors sharply illuminate key issues of public and policy
interest across the world: Do research universities make society
more equal or more unequal? Are students graduating with too much
debt? Who do we want to be attending universities? Will learning
technologies will abolish the need for bricks-and-mortar higher
education institutions? What can countries do to improve their
scientific performance? How can comparative teaching assessment and
research assessment become much more effective? The book explores
higher education in the major higher education regions including
China, Europe, the UK and the USA.
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