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Hoover, Eric – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
Day and night the locals chatter. They counsel and console, bicker and rant. Their questions are endless. Though often hopeful, they never stop pounding the drums of worry. This is College Confidential, a vast virtual realm where visitors can find the best and worst of human nature. Here, in moderated discussion forums, people help strangers. They…
Descriptors: Discussion Groups, Web Sites, College Admission, Anxiety
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
In academe, the game of how to win friends and influence people is serious business. Administrators and grant makers want proof that a researcher's work has life beyond the library or the lab. But the current system of measuring scholarly influence does not reflect the way many researchers work in an environment driven more and more by the social…
Descriptors: Research, Scholarship, Internet, Citation Analysis
Davis, Lennard J. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
A course's reading list is the skeleton of a semester's body of thought, the inventory that a professor writes up for the departmental Web site and the schedule of courses that lists the goods. Despite the obvious utility of fixed reading lists, one should jettison them when possible. The author has been conducting an informal experiment using a…
Descriptors: Reading Lists, Reading, Web Sites, College Faculty
Rice, Alexandra – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Matt Ivester became notorious on campuses across the country in 2007 for publishing gossip--not about celebrities but about students--on Juicy-Campus, the Web site he created. The site was blocked by some colleges, banned by several student governments, and threatened with legal action by several students who claimed that defaming comments on the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Campuses, Internet, Identification
Stratford, Michael – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Energized by his fellow adjunct professors who had gathered for a national meeting last month in Washington, District of Columbia, Joshua A. Boldt flew home to Athens, Georgia, opened his laptop, and created a Google document. On his personal blog, the writing instructor implored colleagues to contribute to the publicly editable spreadsheet,…
Descriptors: Adjunct Faculty, Teaching Conditions, Web Sites, Electronic Publishing
Wilson, Robin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
Independent scholars are a growing part of the academic landscape. They may have been jilted by the academic job market, or are uninterested in either being on the tenure track or in cobbling together full-time work as adjuncts. Like traditional professors, they perform research, secure grants, and publish books and papers. In some cases, their…
Descriptors: Credentials, Academic Freedom, College Faculty, Tenure
Pannapacker, William – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
A persistent criticism of the digital-humanities movement is that it is elitist and exclusive because it requires the resources of a major university (faculty, infrastructure, money), and is thus more suited to campuses with a research focus. Academics and administrators at small liberal-arts colleges may read about DH and, however exciting it…
Descriptors: Humanities, Computer Uses in Education, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes
Young, Jeffrey R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
The long-running debate over whether students should be allowed to wield calculators during mathematics exams may soon seem quaint. The latest dilemma facing professors is whether to let students turn to a Web site called WolframAlpha, which not only solves complex math problems, but also can spell out the steps leading to those solutions. In…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Graphing Calculators, Calculus, Algebra
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
In metabolic terms, publishing in the humanities is more couch potato than sprinter. An idea can take years to move from light-bulb stage to manuscript to finished book. Add another year, or two or three, before an author can expect to see reviews of that book in academic journals. That slows down an already glutted system. "It's just appalling…
Descriptors: Book Reviews, Publishing Industry, Nineteenth Century Literature, Web Sites
Young, Jeffrey R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
For online music services, an endorsement from colleges is the kiss of death. Ruckus Network, in which more than 200 colleges had signed up with to provide a free and legal alternative to unauthorized file swapping, shut down without warning on February 6, reminding some officials of two years ago when another company, Cdigix, abruptly announced…
Descriptors: Music, Internet, Web Sites, College Students
Markin, Karen M. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
When reviewers gather to evaluate grant proposals, they usually do so privately, making those sessions a rich source of academic folklore. The best way to find out what a review session is really like is for an individual to participate in one. Reviewing proposals can require a substantial amount of work, so one should have the time before…
Descriptors: Web Sites, Grants, Program Proposals, Budgets
Ayoub, Nina C. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Are university presses ready for their close-up? In a nod to Hollywood, a growing number of trade publishers are producing book trailers to promote new titles. But do video teasers have a role in university-press publishing? What about longer formats? Based on an entirely unscientific poll of publicists at 25 university presses, the answer appears…
Descriptors: University Presses, Web Sites, Multimedia Materials, Marketing
Lipka, Sara – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Higher education traffics in reputations. To thrive as an institution means keeping up with competitors while setting yourself apart. But as good as colleges have become at building brands, the game is shifting to social media, where there is perpetual motion and little control. Data from the Center for Marketing Research at the University of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Web Sites, Electronic Publishing, Marketing
Young, Jeffrey R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Twitter is quickly becoming a global faculty lounge. Sure, it's easy to waste a lot of time on the Internet-based microblogging service reading mundane details about people's days. But one can also pick up some great higher-education gossip, track down colleagues to collaborate with, or get advice on how to improve one's teaching or research. In…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Technology Uses in Education, Web Sites, Social Networks
Hornbeck, J. Patrick, II – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Two years ago, a former student of the author was raped. That should have been awful enough. But a few months later, his student discovered that her personal horror was being openly discussed--or, more accurately, mocked--on the gossip Web site JuicyCampus, where some of her classmates told her, and anyone else who happened to read the site, that…
Descriptors: Mass Media Effects, Mass Media Use, Web Sites, Human Dignity
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