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September 20, 2010

Monday roundup

A weekly collection of interesting things around the web.

For the first time, last year more women than men earned doctorates. Tenured Radical crunches some numbers and calls out a commenter.

The Times Higher Ed (London) reports that the PhD is a gateway to employment. Commenters aren’t so sure.

Comic strip xkcd makes fun of physicists.

Dean Dad reflects on the first week of the school year.

Evaluating college teaching is a challenge, because 1) professors aren’t generally promoted for teaching and 2) there’s no standard way to measure learning.

Academia runs on professional writing — but few professors were taught to write well. Michael C. Munger offers some tips.

We too often conflate “the humanities” and “the university” — so the question isn’t “Can the university survive the 21st century?” but “Can the humanities survive it?”

Richard Vedder argues that the People and the Academic Class hold different ideas of what higher ed is supposed to be doing.

Women faculty members seem to do better at unionized campuses.

A faculty member at the University of New Mexico was found to be moonlighting as a phone-sex dominatrix — and then all hell broke loose.

Female Science Professor takes issue with the idea that academics slow down after tenure.

Timothy Burke offers tongue-in-cheek advice for becoming a public intellectual.

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September 6, 2010

Monday roundup

A weekly collection of interesting things I find around the web. Feel free to add more in the comments!

The Chronicle asked scholars what the next decade’s Big Idea would be. Here’s what they had to say.

Negotiating your “alternative academic” appointment — those jobs that are in the academy but not disciplinary. Think digital humanities and the like.

How to navigate graduate school in STEM fields if you’re a woman.

Just because people aren’t on the tenure track doesn’t mean they aren’t engaging with research.

Dr. Crazy takes all the rhetoric about reforming higher ed and starts putting it together to talk about how something might actually happen. In Part 1, she reviews the important stakeholders. Here, she reviews the different types of schools involved. Here, she adds the multiple arguments around graduate education.

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August 16, 2010

Monday roundup

A weekly collection of interesting things I find around the interwebs. If you’ve seen something neat I missed, put it in the comments!

Stanley Fish argues that plagiarism is a professional issue, not a moral one.

Two search consultants offer tips for applying to administrative jobs.

When the faculty union and the adjunct union face off.

150 non-profit colleges fail a test of financial strength.

Were you both simultaneously obsessed with and procrastinating on your thesis? Check out PhD Comics this week.

This week’s NY Times “Modern Love” column is all about the academic tw0-body couple — and it doesn’t end the way you might expect.

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