ISBN:
9789401139557
Language:
English
Pages:
Online-Ressource (510p)
,
digital
Edition:
Springer eBook Collection. Humanities, Social Sciences and Law
Series Statement:
Higher Education: Handbook of Theory and Research 14
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als
Keywords:
Education
;
School management and organization.
;
School administration.
;
Education, Higher.
;
Education and state.
;
International education .
;
Comparative education.
Abstract:
Teaching, Learning, and Thinking About Teaching and Learning -- Costs and Productivity in Higher Education: Theory, Evidence, and Policy Implications -- Institutional Adaptation: Demands for Management Reform and University Administration -- University Restructuring: The Role of Economic and Political Contexts -- Understanding Strategy: An Assessment of Theory and Practice -- New Colleges for a New Century: Organizational Change and Development in Community Colleges -- Rasch Measurement in Higher Education -- Greek-letter Social Organizations in Higher Education: A Review of Research -- Cultural Capital as an Interpretive Framework for Faculty Life -- Cruel Environments: Sexual Abuse and Harassment in the Academy -- The Global Emergence of a Field: Content, Form, and Promise in Women’s Studies.
Abstract:
To recapitulate, Greeks differ from Independents and from the academy's value priorities, but for the most part these differences derive from antecedent charac teristics. Moreover, there are some grounds for speculating that these anteced ent differences reflect fundamental temperamental differences (extraversion and gregariousness mediated by social interaction, as opposed to interaction through ideas). Only to a limited degree does the Greek "system" appear to adversely affect the acquisition and assimilation of the academy's value priori ties; i.e., students as a whole, Greek and Independent alike, appear to become more independent, liberal, socially concerned, and culturally sophisticated by graduation. However, the Greek system's effect on the behavior of Greeks is more trou bling, an effect largely mediated by the use and abuse of alcohol and the relative absence of direct institutional supervision. Assuming the retention of the Greek system, then, the promotion of the acad emy's agenda appears dependent on (a) an understanding and accommodation of the personal characteristics of Greeks, using appropriate pedagogical meth ods to advance the academy's educational objectives, and (b) both educational and administrative/regulatory efforts to control the use and abuse of alcohol. With or without the Greek system, the advancement of the academy's agenda involves these considerations, since the characteristics of students as a whole encompass the characteristics emphasized among Greeks.
DOI:
10.1007/978-94-011-3955-7
URL:
Volltext
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