Inside Higher Ed
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International Call for Open Resources
via Inside Higher Ed by (author unknown) on January 21, 2008
Key educators and foundation officials issue manifesto calling for more course material to be free and easily available online.
Shared by: Mary Stamboulie,
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Keeping Citations Straight, and Finding New Ones
via Inside Higher Ed by (author unknown) on January 30, 2008
CiteULike, a social bookmarking tool, gains ground among scholars looking to share journal articles, trade citations and collaborate online.
Shared by: Mary Stamboulie,
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Buying a Spot on the Syllabus
via Inside Higher Ed by (author unknown) on February 26, 2008
Some Marshall U. professors object to gift that requires course with Atlas Shrugged, saying link violates academic freedom. Professor who will teach class says critics just don't like Ayn Rand.
Shared by: Zach,
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Theses are Forever
via Inside Higher Ed by (author unknown) on February 27, 2008
The presidential campaign has turned some work by college seniors into fodder for public debate. Some have mixed feelings about the scrutiny of such early academic writings.
Shared by: Zach,
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A Call for Slow Writing
via Inside Higher Ed by (author unknown) on March 09, 2008
It's time for journal essays to replace books as the dominant mode of scholarly communication, writes Lindsay Waters.
Shared by: Karie,
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Massachusetts Should Tax Harvard
via Inside Higher Ed by (author unknown) on May 18, 2008
Shared by Karie Not sure how I feel about this, but the notion that Harvard could leave the state is pretty funny.James D. Miller defends as logical a state lawmaker's proposal to tax the assets of the wealthy colleges and universities within the state's borders.
Shared by: Karie,
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