As the 20th century closes, a key question is: What can the social sciences do to help solve the problems of our society and world? The authors identify the principal causes of the crisis in the university and the social sciences to be intellectual fragmentation and a structural contradiction that is built into the American research university. They then propose a radical reorientation of American universities toward helping solve real-world problems-particularly those in a university\u27s local community. The authors suggest that such an orientation can be achieved through communal participatory action research projects designed to help change society. This research strategy, they argue, will significantly advance both general knowledge an...
Momentum is growing to take public scholarship seriously as a movement that will “challenge and resh...
If universities sought to help promote human welfare rationally, they would give intellectual priori...
In a recent article, Creating the New American College, Ernest Boyer challenges higher education t...
Today's universities are confronted with questions about the increasing scale of corporatisation and...
Should the American research university have a strategy for renewing its civic mission in a diverse ...
In this article, the authors argue that the academic-practitioner divide is largely a product of the...
In the rapidly accelerating global era in which we now live, human beings must solve a vast array of...
As Robert Putnam writes in Bowling Alone, the American population is facing a decline in their civi...
The present study starts describing the relevance of university mission statements and how they have...
Public schools across the US are perceived to be broken, in particular schools where higher dropout ...
Gilion IV Conferencehttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/89227/1/2003_Zemsky-Duderstadt-G...
This paper explores how student affairs practitioners may engage in critical cultural praxis through...
The research is concerned with one of the signs of a globally evolving democracy: social movements. ...
Excessive emphasis on research as the dominant measure of institutional as well as individual presti...
Graduate students commonly experience isolation and estrangement when conducting their final researc...
Momentum is growing to take public scholarship seriously as a movement that will “challenge and resh...
If universities sought to help promote human welfare rationally, they would give intellectual priori...
In a recent article, Creating the New American College, Ernest Boyer challenges higher education t...
Today's universities are confronted with questions about the increasing scale of corporatisation and...
Should the American research university have a strategy for renewing its civic mission in a diverse ...
In this article, the authors argue that the academic-practitioner divide is largely a product of the...
In the rapidly accelerating global era in which we now live, human beings must solve a vast array of...
As Robert Putnam writes in Bowling Alone, the American population is facing a decline in their civi...
The present study starts describing the relevance of university mission statements and how they have...
Public schools across the US are perceived to be broken, in particular schools where higher dropout ...
Gilion IV Conferencehttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/89227/1/2003_Zemsky-Duderstadt-G...
This paper explores how student affairs practitioners may engage in critical cultural praxis through...
The research is concerned with one of the signs of a globally evolving democracy: social movements. ...
Excessive emphasis on research as the dominant measure of institutional as well as individual presti...
Graduate students commonly experience isolation and estrangement when conducting their final researc...
Momentum is growing to take public scholarship seriously as a movement that will “challenge and resh...
If universities sought to help promote human welfare rationally, they would give intellectual priori...
In a recent article, Creating the New American College, Ernest Boyer challenges higher education t...