Innovations Library

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John McGuire June 1993
Volume: 6 Issue: 6
Count all 426
The use of part time faculty in community colleges is generally considered a necessary evil, rationalized as an important strategy for saving money and maintaining flexibility. Some have decried the overuse of part timers as a cheap fix, a dangerous addiction, or exploitation of the worse kind. However, part time faculty are a problem only if they are relegated to the margins of the institution and treated with the respect usually reserved for skeletons in the collective community college closet.
Nancy LeCroy, Barbara Tedrow May 1993
Volume: 6 Issue: 5
Count all 423
From its inception, the community college has fashioned its mission through a symbiotic relationship with the local community that has been fundamentally influenced by proximity and need. In its brief history, these colleges have solidified first transfer, then occupational, and finally community service and support roles through a give and take with local constituencies. However, as the issues with which individuals and communities struggle on a daily basis have become more urgent, the tensions inherent in the relationship between college and community have become more apparent.
Developed under the auspices of the AAHE Assessment Forum April 1993
Volume: 6 Issue: 4
Count all 426
American colleges have a long history of grading and certifying student work. The more recent practice of assessment builds on that history by looking at student achievement not only within courses but across them, asking about cumulative learning outcomes. As a systematic process of gathering, interpreting, and using information about student learning, assessment is a powerful tool for educational improvement.
Edgar J. Boone, George B. Vaughan March 1993
Volume: 6 Issue: 3
Count all 423
Community college leaders face challenges today that extend well beyond the boundaries of traditional degree programs and on-campus instruction. While venturing beyond these boundaries is nothing new to them, the challenges they face are different in degree, if not always in kind, from past challenges.
Brenda Marshall Beckman, Don Doucette February 1993
Volume: 6 Issue: 2
Count all 423
Growing concern regarding the nation's competitive position in the global economy has been a matter of discussion for some time. It is now clear that a fundamental factor contributing to this critical situation is the chronic, long term inadequacy of workforce preparation. Consequent issues of quality and productivity have forced corporations across the country to restructure their organizations and to invest in worker training.
David T. Osborne January 1993
Volume: 6 Issue: 1
Count all 425
An historic change is now coursing through all levels of American government: a shift from the rigid, wasteful, centralized bureaucracies of the industrial era to the more flexible, entrepreneurial, decentralized government needed to succeed in today's world. This shift, under way for more than a decade, has been brought into sharp relief by the fiscal crisis now crippling our governments.
Grace N. Mitchell, Ann B. Grant, Marilyn Rossa December 1992
Volume: 5 Issue: 10
Count all 423
In the fiercely competitive world of international business, participatory management has become accepted as key to corporate organization and effective decision making. However, despite its proud tradition of faculty involvement in institutional governance, higher educa-tion has lagged behind business in establishing viable -models for successful shared decision making.
Ernest L. Boyer November 1992
Volume: 5 Issue: 9
Count all 423
Educating students in a multicultural world means affirming the sacredness of every individual, celebrating the uniqueness of every culture, and acknowledging the non-uniformity that separates one person from another, the distinctiveness that makes us who we are. This is the centerpiece of education in a multicultural world.
J. William Wenrich October 1992
Volume: 5 Issue: 8
Count all 425
Most community college educators do not worry about the financial security of their retirement years even though they should. The assumption many make that the "system" will provide for them often blocks realistic assessment of future resources versus future need, often until they are within a few years of retiring. This is not an inconsequential matter since half or more of all current community college faculty, administrators, and staff are projected to retire in this decade.
Kay McClenney, James Mingle September 1992
Volume: 5 Issue: 7
Count all 424
Across the nation, higher education institutions and state agencies are dealing with a complexity of issues that will make the decade of the nineties very challenging. Three factors seem particularly salient: high expectations for education, growing public distrust of institutions, and concern about the future.
Carol A. Twigg, Don Douchette August 1992
Volume: 5 Issue: 6
Count all 425
There is universal agreement among all sectors of American society that improving education and training is essential if the United States is to remain competitive in the world economy in the 1990s and beyond. There is also general agreement that one of the most serious problems facing the country is the seemingly inexorable rise in the cost of education, with no apparent increase in benefits. In colleges and universities, in particular, the trend is for students to be paying more and receiving less.
Gerald Bogen, Jerry Moskus May 1992
Volume: 5 Issue: 5
Count all 427
Of the various metaphors commonly used to describe the relationship between a board and president--a team, a partnership, a marriage--perhaps none is more useful than the marriage metaphor. What is desired in institutional governance, as in marriage is a relationship based on a strong commitment, mutual support, shared understanding of roles, honest communication, and trust. Dysfunction in, or dissolution of, a board-president relationship is as traumatic for an institution as conflict or divorce is for a family.
Sandy Acebo April 1992
Volume: 5 Issue: 4
Count all 426
Many organizations are rethinking the way they see themselves and their employees. The quality revolution, the advent of the information age, and the pressures of international competition have created an awareness of the importance of honoring collective rather than individual accomplishment. Organizations that survive and prosper will likely be the ones that learn how to structure themselves to take advantage of the strengths of teams.
Stanley J. Spanbauer March 1992
Volume: 5 Issue: 3
Count all 423
The integration of world economies, rapidly changing technology, and increases in market competition have caused a renewed emphasis on quality and productivity in American business and industry. These changes have created an enormous need and market for training. Community and technical colleges across America have moved to address the training needs of private sector companies in their service areas, including assisting them in their quest to implement total quality management, or TQM.
Judy C. Lever February 1992
Volume: 5 Issue: 2
Count all 423
"Doing more with less" has become a theme and core challenge facing community colleges, as well as most other educational institutions. The pressure is twofold. First, colleges are confronted with record enrollments at a time of level or decreasing revenues. Adding to the pressure is the fast expanding pool of nontraditional students requiring new and upgraded job-related skills to compete in the global economy.

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