Shakespeare, Einstein, and the Bottom Line: The Marketing of Higher Education

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Harvard University Press, 2003. nov. 30. - 328 oldal

How can you turn an English department into a revenue center? How do you grade students if they are "customers" you must please? How do you keep industry from dictating a university's research agenda? What happens when the life of the mind meets the bottom line? Wry and insightful, Shakespeare, Einstein, and the Bottom Line takes us on a cross-country tour of the most powerful trend in academic life today--the rise of business values and the belief that efficiency, immediate practical usefulness, and marketplace triumph are the best measures of a university's success.

With a shrewd eye for the telling example, David Kirp relates stories of marketing incursions into places as diverse as New York University's philosophy department and the University of Virginia's business school, the high-minded University of Chicago and for-profit DeVry University. He describes how universities "brand" themselves for greater appeal in the competition for top students; how academic super-stars are wooed at outsized salaries to boost an institution's visibility and prestige; how taxpayer-supported academic research gets turned into profitable patents and ideas get sold to the highest bidder; and how the liberal arts shrink under the pressure to be self-supporting.

Far from doctrinaire, Kirp believes there's a place for the market--but the market must be kept in its place. While skewering Philistinism, he admires the entrepreneurial energy that has invigorated academe's dreary precincts. And finally, he issues a challenge to those who decry the ascent of market values: given the plight of higher education, what is the alternative?

 

Tartalomjegyzék

This Little Student Went to Market
11
Nietzsches Niche The University of Chicago
33
Benjamin Rushs Brat Dickinson College
52
Star Wars New York University
66
MANAGEMENT 101
91
The Dead Hand of Precedent New York Law School
93
Kafka Was an Optimist The University of Southern California and the University of Michigan
110
Mr Jeffersons Private College Darden Graduate School of Business Administration University of Virginia
130
The Market in Ideas Columbia University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
164
The British Are Comingand Going Open University
185
THE SMART MONEY
205
A Good Deal of Collaboration The University of California Berkeley
207
The Information Technology Gold Rush IT Certification Courses in Silicon Valley
221
Theyre All Business DeVry University
240
The Corporation of Learning
255
Notes
265

VIRTUAL WORLDS
147
Rebel Alliance Classics Departments in the Associated Colleges of the South
149
Acknowledgments
315
Copyright

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A szerzőről (2003)

David L. Kirp is Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley and the author of fourteen books, most recently Almost Home: America's Love-Hate Relationship with Community.

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