
Features

by Chris Cumo ALL GRADUATION SPEECHES come in the same cookie-cutter mold. Every speaker, whether at Georgetown, San Diego State University, Texas A & M or Oberlin, repeats the bland mantra: commencement is.
by Phyllis M. Frakt and James O. Castagnera Phyllis M. Frakt is vicepresident for academic affairs and provost at Rider University. James O. Castagnerais associate vice president for academic affairs and.
by Laura D. Goodwin and Ellen A. Stevens Laura D. Goodwin is associate dean and professor of education and Ellen A. Stevens is assistant professor of education at the School.
by Marla Kay Houghteling WORDS ARE IMPORTANT to Ken Hardy; he doesn’t shy away from the difficult ones. He’d like his students to have this same respect for language. In.
by Laura D. Goodwin and Ellen A. Stevens Laura D. Goodwin is associate dean and professor of education and Ellen A. Stevens is assistant professor of education at the School.
by Chris Cumo The University of Washington in Seattle was the first American university in the early 1920s to let students evaluate their professors, writes Peter Seldin, distinguished professor of.