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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 1995

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Forget Goals, Try Scenarios

From Volume 23 Number 4 | Summer 1995

Abstract: Book Review: Living Without a Goal, by James Ogilvy. Doubleday, 1995. 201 pages. ISBN 0-385-41799-3.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 1995

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To Enhance Learning While Reducing Costs

From Volume 23 Number 4 | Summer 1995

Abstract: Viewpoint Subtitles: Reuniting the campus fragments; A more common touch. Pull quotes: "Course overlap is sanity itself compared with the absurdity of program duplication." "Imagine a campus that devoted one day a week to very large events."

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 1995

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How to Think About Rising College Costs

A primer for planners about higher education's "cost disease" and its future effects.

From Volume 23 Number 4 | Summer 1995

Abstract: A primer for planners about higher education's "cost disease" and its future effects. Subtitles: Why the cost disease?; Can we afford higher education?; Reallocating national resources; The huge job of persuasion. Pull quotes: "The cost of American higher education has quadrupled over the 42-year period." "In higher education the nature of the products make their production a handicraft activity." "Personal services are condemned to slower productivity growth." "By 2040 education and health care alone could well absorb over half of the entire GNP." "Higher education is an example of the need for reconceived practices."

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 1995

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How Should We Think About the Future?

From Volume 23 Number 4 | Summer 1995

Abstract: Book review: Visions of the Future, by robert Heilbroner. Oxford university Press, 1995. 128 pages. ISBN 0-19-509074-8

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 1995

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Creating Landmark Campuses in Colorado

From Volume 23 Number 4 | Summer 1995

Abstract: Book Review: Modernism at Mid-Century: The Architecture of the U.S. Air force Academy, edited by robert Bruegmann. University of Chicago press, 1995. 200 pages. ISBN 02326-07693-8

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 1995

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Marketing as Strategic Behavior

From Volume 23 Number 4 | Summer 1995

Abstract: Book review: Strategic Marketing for Educational Institutions, by Philip Kotler and Karen F. A. Fox. Second edition. Prentice-Hall, 1995. 474 pages. ISBN 0-13-668989-2.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 1995

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Statewide Planning During Declining State Support

Hard times may require a different approach to decision making.

From Volume 23 Number 4 | Summer 1995

Abstract: Subtitles: The storm begins; Push comes to shove; What made it possible; And then the backlash; Pull quotes: "Across the country higher education support is being squeezed out." "Governor Schaefer was not happy." "The entire network was stunned by the rapidity with which the Regents acted." "Good data were a critical factor."

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 1995

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The New World of Information Design

From Volume 23 Number 4 | Summer 1995

Abstract: Book review: The Nondesigner's Design Book: Design and typographic Principles for the Visual Novice, by Robin Williams. Peachpit Press, 1994. 144 pages. ISBN 1-56609-159-4.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
June 1, 1995

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Benchmarking: The New Tool

Comparing your own operation with the very best can be a new route to improvements.

From Volume 23 Number 4 | Summer 1995

Abstract: Subtitles: Anatomy of benchmarking; The vital parts; How do colleges learn?; It's no one's responsibility; What's the corrective?; How does it work? Pull quotes: "Benchmarking is not a simple matter of visiting the finest competitors." "There are really two parts to benchmarking." "Universities can learn a great deal from the best non-educational enterprises." "It is most effective when performed by a team." "The first impression of a campus can have a powerful effect." "Faculty members tend to see money spent on campus grounds as a frivolous expenditure." "Newer campus plantings look like those around large suburban homes." "The campus landscape assessment is a different animal."F

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1995

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The Great Disturbance About Intelligence

College and universities may be the unwitting shapers of a surprising new class structure.

From Volume 23 Number 3 | Spring 1995

Abstract: Subtitles: The book's reception; Watchdogs and escaping cats; Down at the roots; Reification or reality?; Are there several intelligences?; Genes versus the environment; America's new class structure; And in closing... Pull quotes: "Equality of opportunity is creating a radically new class structure." " what I find most revealing is the almost uniform rejection of the book's findings." "The Bell Curve has exposed a mighty clash between two great paradigms." "As the number of items increases something truly remarkable happens." "Far more than social background, IQ determines which youths will never receive a high school diploma." "Colleges now identify and select the best minds for high positions."

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