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Perspectives on the History of Higher Education - Volume 25, 2006 (Hardcover)
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Perspectives on the History of Higher Education - Volume 25, 2006 (Hardcover)
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Volume Twenty-Five of Perspectives on the History of Higher
Education, the silver anniversary edition, offers three fresh
contributions to the understanding of American higher education in
the nineteenth century and three historical perspectives on topics
of contemporary concern. The divergent paths of antebellum colleges
in the North and South have long been recognized. Stephen Tomlinson
and Kevin Windham discuss Alva Woods, who moved from Calvinist New
England to preside over the new University of Alabama. Woods
personified the commitment to evangelical Protestantism and rigid
student discipline that prevailed in northern colleges of that era,
but in Tuscaloosa confronted the sons of planters, raised to
respect mainly independence, power, and the Southern code of honor.
Adam Nelson considers geology, a crucially important science in
early America that existed on the periphery of higher education but
eventually exerted pressure for intellectual modernization. He
portrays the small community of scientific pioneers who sought the
latest scientific knowledge from Europe, surveyed the mineral
wealth of American states, and advocated for science in the college
curriculum. Beginning in the 1930s, the National Research Council
waged an organized campaign to encourage academic patenting and
centralize it within one organization. Jane Robbins explains the
crosscurrents of interests that plagued and eventually scuttled
that effort, but that set the stage for the contemporary practice
of university patenting. Robert Hampel examines how, for more than
four decades, students at Yale University took a major
responsibility for learning into their own hands by publishing a
Critique of courses. He analyzes these documents to determine if
their aims were to identify easy or challenging offerings, and
finds that this effort produced highly responsible articles. A
review essay by Doris Malkmus sheds new light on the experience of
co-eds in post-bellum universities and normal schools, while one by
Nancy Diamond discusses the university presidency, and deftly shows
that examining presidential lives can offer telling perspective on
the evolution of the university. Roger L. Geiger is Distinguished
Professor of Higher Education at the Pennsylvania State University.
He has edited the Perspectives on the History of Higher Education
Annual since 1993.
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