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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
July 1, 1995

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The New Legal Enviroment of Higher Education.

From Volume 23 Number 4 | Summer 1995

Abstract: Book review: The Law of Higher Education, third edition, by William Kaplin and Barbara Lee. Jossey-Bass, 1995. 1056 pages. ISBN 0-7879-0052-4.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 1995

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How a Place Affects Our Feelings

From Volume 23 Number 4 | Summer 1995

Abstract: Book review: The Power of the Place: How Our Surroundings Shape Our Thoughts, Emotions, and Actions, by Winifred Gallagher. Harper Perennial, 1994. 240 pages. ISBN 0-06-097602-0

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
July 1, 1995

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The Neglected Campus Landscape

New forces are ruining many college landscapes. A novel planning activity can help halt the erosion.

From Volume 23 Number 4 | Summer 1995

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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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Strategic Planning for Technology

From Volume 23 Number 3 | Spring 1995

Abstract: Book review: organizational and Technologiacl Startegies for Higher Education in the Information Age, by David Ernst, Richard Katz, and John Sack. CAUSE Professional Paper Series, No. 13, 1995. 25 pages.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1995

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Planning and Academic Politics

From Volume 23 Number 3 | Spring 1995

Abstract: Book review: The Art and Politics of College teaching, edited by R. McLaran Sawyer, Keith Prichard, adn Karl Hostetler. Peter Lang, 1992. 344 pages. ISBN 0-8204-1684-3 The New Faculty Memeber: Supporting and Fostering Professional Development, by Robert Boice. Jossey-Bass, 1993. 364 pages. ISBN 1-5542-423-6. University Politics: F.M. Cornford's Cambridge and His Advice to the Young Academic Politician, by Gordon Johnson. Cambridge University Press, 1994. 112 pages. ISBN 0-521-46919-8.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1995

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Campus Architecture That Shapes Behavior

From Volume 23 Number 3 | Spring 1995

Abstract: How colleges can design buildings to foster collegiality and productivity. Subtitles: The four promoters of talk; Moving people on campus. Pull quotes: "Planners should demand that architecture pay attention to the enhancement of exchanges and visits." "Magnets are important to draw faculty out of their offices." "Atriums have become popular linking floor levels." "Campus architecture should be grounded in the research on behavior."

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1995

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How Much Can Education Do?

Should we prefer standardized tests or high standards for everyone?

From Volume 23 Number 3 | Spring 1995

Abstract: Should we prefer standardized tests or high standards for everyone? Subtitles: A choice of intelligences; Those intelligence tests; How universities select the cognitive elite; Troubles in the methodology; Ethnicity, IQ, and social policy. Pull quotes: "Perhaps the most important social trend is the growing establishment of a new class." "Rating human intelligence is complex.: "People with lower IQ's are more likely to experience the greatest problems." "Only 10 percent of the 1952 entering class at Harvard would be competitive in the admissions process today." "It is peculiar how their fetish for the normal distribution is suspended when defining dependent variables other than IQ." "Is the cognitive elite among African Americans also attending college...and living a better life?" "What should the nation's policies be toward individuals and groups who rate at various points throughout the distribution?"

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