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Backes-Gellner, Uschi; Schlinghoff, Axel – European Education, 2010
Increasingly, faculty members are rewarded financially for prestige-maximizing publications. As a result, the balance between publishing and other activities such as teaching or public service may collapse, as argued by Leisyte, Enders, and de Boer (2009). In our paper, we focus on career-related rewards and study their impact on publication…
Descriptors: Incentives, Rewards, Public Service, Faculty Promotion
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Woodhouse, David; Stokes, Terry – Research in Comparative and International Education, 2010
Modern Australia evolved from separate colonies, which came together as a federation a century ago. The balance of state/federal responsibilities is relevant to most aspects of Australian life. This includes higher education, where universities are largely state owned but federally funded (with government funding declining), while the other higher…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Audits (Verification), Foreign Countries, Federal Government
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Haggerty, Kevin D. – American Sociologist, 2010
This article aims to demystify some of the realities of graduate education for the next generation of professors in the humanities and social sciences. Its "tell it like it is" orientation is designed to ensure that graduate students have a firm understanding of the institution they are entering, and will hopefully help them avoid any number of…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Graduate Study, Humanities, Social Sciences
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Bingham, Charles W. – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2008
This article explores Derrida's claim that teaching is a deconstructive process. In order to explore this claim, the Derridean concept of "erasure" is explored. Using the concept of erasure, this article examines two important aspects of teaching: the name that teachers establish for themselves, and, teaching against social power from a Derridean…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Reputation, Power Structure, Resistance (Psychology)
Thacker, Lloyd – New England Journal of Higher Education, 2008
Colleges and universities are "ranksteering"--driving under the influence of popular college rankings systems like "U.S. News and World Report's" Best Colleges. This article examines the criticisms of college rankings and describes how a group of education leaders is honing a plan to end the tyranny of the ratings game and better help students and…
Descriptors: College Choice, Reputation, Higher Education, Criticism
Ott, Molly C. – ProQuest LLC, 2011
This study contributes to the discussion around the value of a college degree and associated career advantages by considering how postsecondary education contributes to the attainment of the most powerful and prestigious positions in the American corporate world. Guided by a conceptual framework informed by status attainment, power elite, and…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Corporations, Income, Reputation
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Kent, Raymond D. – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2011
"Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics (CLP)" and its namesake field have accomplished a great deal in the last quarter of a century. The success of the journal parallels the growth and vitality of the field it represents. The markers of journal achievement are several, including increased number of journal pages published annually; greater diversity…
Descriptors: Periodicals, Speech Language Pathology, Reputation, Phonetics
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Kuh, George D.; Kinzie, Jillian; Schuh, John H.; Whitt, Elizabeth J. – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2011
A few years ago, in "Student Success in College (SSiC)," the authors profiled twenty colleges and universities that were unusually effective in fostering student engagement and success, defined as better-than-predicted scores on the National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE) and better-than-predicted graduation rates. These schools are…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Human Capital, Academic Achievement, Colleges
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Hou, Zhi-Jin; Leung, S. Alvin – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2011
This study examined the vocational aspirations and parental vocational expectations of high school students and their parents (1067 parent-child dyads). Participants completed a demographic questionnaire and an Occupations List. The Occupations List consisted of 126 occupational titles evenly distributed across the six Holland types. Parents were…
Descriptors: Expectation, High Schools, Occupations, Daughters
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Blackburn, Greg – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2011
Factors which influence students' selection of a Master of Business Administration programme are identified and the variation in their relative importance across the student population investigated. This research also identifies the features of a university which attracts students, as well as examining the students' perceptions of the management…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grounded Theory, Student Attitudes, Business Administration Education
MacLeod, W. Bentley; Urquiola, Miguel – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2009
Friedman (1962) argued that a free market in which schools compete based upon their reputation would lead to an efficient supply of educational services. This paper explores this issue by building a tractable model in which rational individuals go to school and accumulate skill valued in a perfectly competitive labor market. To this it adds one…
Descriptors: Free Enterprise System, Income, Reputation, Educational Quality
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
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Bowman, Nicholas A.; Bastedo, Michael N. – Research in Higher Education, 2009
Recent studies have suggested that a causal link exists between college rankings and subsequent admissions indicators. However, it is unclear how these effects vary across institutional type (i.e., national universities vs. liberal arts colleges) or whether these effects persist when controlling for other factors that affect admissions outcomes.…
Descriptors: Mass Media Effects, College Admission, College Applicants, College Choice
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Elbeck, Matt – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2009
This commentary advances a positive relationship between a business school's ranking in the popular press and student learning by advocating market-oriented measures of student learning. A framework for student learning is based on the Assurance of Learning mandated by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business International,…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Reputation, Business Education, Guidelines
Blumenstyk, Goldie – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Temple University's program with Tsinghua University, now in its 10th year, is the oldest of its kind in China. It may take years to understand how a program that trains a few dozen legal professionals a year may affect the legal rights of 1.3 billion Chinese. But there is no question about the benefits that this program has produced for Temple's…
Descriptors: Judges, Law Schools, Masters Programs, Foreign Countries
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