Higher Education and the American Dream : Success and Its Discontents /
Lazerson, Marvin
Higher Education and the American Dream : Success and Its Discontents / Marvin Lazerson. - 1 online resource (231 p.)
Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Houses, Automobiles, and Higher Education -- Part I. The Gospel of Getting Ahead -- Chapter 1. Building the dream (and worrying about it) -- Chapter 2. Higher education as vocational education -- Part II. Governance and Managerial Dilemmas -- Chapter 3. Who governs higher education? -- Chapter 4. Managerial imperatives -- Part III. The Teaching and Learning Conundrum -- Chapter 5. Academic disciplines, research imperatives, and undergraduate learning -- Chapter 6. A revolution in teaching and learning -- Part IV. Making Things Better -- Chapter 7. Why is higher education so hard to reform? -- References -- Name Index -- Subject Index
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
Marvin Lazerson (professor at the Central European University and the University of Pennsylvania) considers the successes of higher education in the USA and how this has also bred discontent. He traces the development of higher education from the last half of the twentieth century, and considers why the expansion occurred, how it became an industry, and the increasing role of education in job attainment, as well as problems like rising costs, debates about the economic worth of higher education, and the decline in its civic, moral, and intellectual purposes. He also discusses changes in governance to a more business-like model, the managerial imperatives colleges face, changes to curriculum and research, and reform.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9786155211911
10.1515/9786155211911 doi
EDUCATION / Higher.
21st century, Higher Education, United States.
Higher Education and the American Dream : Success and Its Discontents / Marvin Lazerson. - 1 online resource (231 p.)
Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Houses, Automobiles, and Higher Education -- Part I. The Gospel of Getting Ahead -- Chapter 1. Building the dream (and worrying about it) -- Chapter 2. Higher education as vocational education -- Part II. Governance and Managerial Dilemmas -- Chapter 3. Who governs higher education? -- Chapter 4. Managerial imperatives -- Part III. The Teaching and Learning Conundrum -- Chapter 5. Academic disciplines, research imperatives, and undergraduate learning -- Chapter 6. A revolution in teaching and learning -- Part IV. Making Things Better -- Chapter 7. Why is higher education so hard to reform? -- References -- Name Index -- Subject Index
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
Marvin Lazerson (professor at the Central European University and the University of Pennsylvania) considers the successes of higher education in the USA and how this has also bred discontent. He traces the development of higher education from the last half of the twentieth century, and considers why the expansion occurred, how it became an industry, and the increasing role of education in job attainment, as well as problems like rising costs, debates about the economic worth of higher education, and the decline in its civic, moral, and intellectual purposes. He also discusses changes in governance to a more business-like model, the managerial imperatives colleges face, changes to curriculum and research, and reform.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9786155211911
10.1515/9786155211911 doi
EDUCATION / Higher.
21st century, Higher Education, United States.

