According to Profession\u27s 2005 Presidential Forum, one reason for dwindling enrollment in the Humanities is lack of interdisciplinarity. Learning communities, courses clustered around a common theme and taught to the same group of students are a powerful example of a kind of interdisciplinarity that is flourishing on more than five-hundred campuses in the United States.This essay looks closely at the expanding learning community movement and its relevance to revitalizing the Humanities
How do you teach the humanities to working class students living in the shadow of a BP oil refinery?...
Although humanists have tended to dwell on simple dichotomies as the source of our problems - the hu...
Part of a collaborative commission between the National Humanities Alliance, the Federation of State...
According to Profession\u27s 2005 Presidential Forum, one reason for dwindling enrollment in the Hum...
Will public scholarship and community engagement become central to revitalizing the humanities in th...
Will public scholarship and community engagement become central to revitalizing the humanities in th...
In this essay, I reflect on my experience working in the field of Digital Humanities at The Graduate...
Despite problems old and new that threaten the future of US higher education, I see promising signs ...
This article was published in the Spring 2012 issue of the Journal of Undergraduate Researc
Colleges and universities in the 21st century will thrive through extensive collaborations with othe...
This workshop explores how teaching within the humanities is affected, challenged, or improved by pu...
At the heart of learning communities is a culture of inquiry, supported by research, practices from ...
Drawing on research literature and a set of informal interviews with humanities faculty and leaders ...
Larry Andrews’s article “The Humanities Are Dead! Long Live the Humanities!” addresses and solidifie...
What is the worth of humanities teaching and research? This collaborative report, based on meetings ...
How do you teach the humanities to working class students living in the shadow of a BP oil refinery?...
Although humanists have tended to dwell on simple dichotomies as the source of our problems - the hu...
Part of a collaborative commission between the National Humanities Alliance, the Federation of State...
According to Profession\u27s 2005 Presidential Forum, one reason for dwindling enrollment in the Hum...
Will public scholarship and community engagement become central to revitalizing the humanities in th...
Will public scholarship and community engagement become central to revitalizing the humanities in th...
In this essay, I reflect on my experience working in the field of Digital Humanities at The Graduate...
Despite problems old and new that threaten the future of US higher education, I see promising signs ...
This article was published in the Spring 2012 issue of the Journal of Undergraduate Researc
Colleges and universities in the 21st century will thrive through extensive collaborations with othe...
This workshop explores how teaching within the humanities is affected, challenged, or improved by pu...
At the heart of learning communities is a culture of inquiry, supported by research, practices from ...
Drawing on research literature and a set of informal interviews with humanities faculty and leaders ...
Larry Andrews’s article “The Humanities Are Dead! Long Live the Humanities!” addresses and solidifie...
What is the worth of humanities teaching and research? This collaborative report, based on meetings ...
How do you teach the humanities to working class students living in the shadow of a BP oil refinery?...
Although humanists have tended to dwell on simple dichotomies as the source of our problems - the hu...
Part of a collaborative commission between the National Humanities Alliance, the Federation of State...