Campus – Reflections On Higher Education

Category Campus

Educational Philanthropy

Sixth in a series on why U.S. Universities are great Only religious organizations benefit from American philanthropy more than universities. The causes for this are manifold, but the effect is that universities have become excellent because of philanthropy.  Generosity ceases…

A Personal Reflection for the Season

This reflection was originally published on December 15, 2008.  It is worth a second look. Christmas memories are personal, deep and important for me. My family’s New York Christmases with the strong, first generational, influence of Western Europe; Cajun Christmases…

Our Universities: Economic Development

Good universities provide economic growth by pursuing their primary purpose: Universities must cultivate the human spirit and, simultaneously, build the capacity of the mind with a challenging academic environment.  Positive growth always follows. “Only when the human spirit is allowed…

Our Universities: College Towns

Tenth in the series, Follow the money From Boston to Austin and Oxford, Mississippi, to West Lafayette, Indiana, big and small, prosperous or starving, universities are married to communities, for better or worse. When one hurts, both do. “The relationship…

Our Universities: Campus Castles

Seventh in the series, Follow the money A campus is more than buildings, but nothing without them. An Internet address? Maybe. Campus buildings, monuments, stadiums, digs and castles, are worth little without collected cultural, scientific and artistic insight and a…

Our Universities: Traditions

Universities are defined by their traditions. They can take many forms, some positive, and some negative, but all communities have traditions shaped by citizens who reside there, and a university is a community. Traditions cannot be regulated or imposed, but…

Our Universities: Like Museums

Museums bridge the gap between study and reality and, as in universities, the relationship between communities and the meaning of the things they have produced can both be confused and confusing at times.  James Clerk Maxwell, the 19th century Scottish…

Chat Toggle
Op-Ed Owl
Op-Ed Owl
Op-Ed Owl
Op-Ed Owl
Send
Powered by AI24