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Your Higher Education Planning Library

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1995

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Reinventing Liberal Education

From Volume 23 Number 3 | Spring 1995

Abstract: Viewpoint Subtitles: Recreate, not restore; Digging into the structure. Pull quotes: "The economics of being a professor have changed." "Liberal education cannot return to the past." "Colleges may need to experiment with two kinds of tenure."

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 1995

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Writing the Building Program for Architects

Campus planners can help architects by providing better guidelines for design.

From Volume 23 Number 3 | Spring 1995

Abstract: Campus planners can help architects by providing better guidelines for design. Subtitles: Function, not discipline; Designing with nature; Appearance is important; Pull quotes: "A thorough program is a mjaor factor in getting an outstanding new building." "We once rotated a building on its site some 10 feet." "A campus should not be a museum of idiosyncratic architectural expressions." "The program should let the architect know where the college stands."

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
December 1, 1994

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A New Way for States to Fund Higher Education

Can institutional planning and formula funding be brought together?

From Volume 23 Number 2 | Winter 1994–1995

Abstract: Subtitles: Response to the cuts; Thinking anew; The knell and the new. Pull quotes: "Prospects for a return to robust state appropriations seem dim." "What formula should states use to fund their public institutions?" "Each institution would thus have different cost bases." "The time for across-the-board tuitions caps may have passed." "Tuitions in the state should be more variegated, not uniform as they are today."

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
December 1, 1994

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The Rediscovery of Town Planning

From Volume 23 Number 2 | Winter 1994–1995

Abstract: Book review: The New Urbanism: Toward an Architecture of COmmunity, edited by Peter Katz. McGraw-Hill, 1994.425 pages. ISBN 0-07-03388902. The New City, Volume 2: The American City, edited by Jean-Francois Le Jeune. University of Miami School of Architecture, Winter 1993-94. 151 pages. ISBN 1-878271-86-5.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
December 1, 1994

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How Should State Plan for Their Universities?

From Volume 23 Number 2 | Winter 1994–1995

Abstract: Book review: Four Multicampus Systems: Some Policies and Practices That Work, by Marian Gade. Association of Governing Boards, 1993. 70 pages. ISBN 0-926508-01-6. Shared Visions of Public Higher Education Governance: Structures and Leadership Styles That Work, by Edgar Schick, Richard Novack, James Norton, and Houston Elam. American Association of State Colleges and Universities, 1992. 179 pages. ISBN 0-88044-132-1.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
December 1, 1994

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How Scholarly Are the Feminist Charges?

From Volume 23 Number 2 | Winter 1994–1995

Abstract: Book Review: Who STole Feminism? How Women Have Betrayed Women, by Chritina Hofff Sommers. SImon and Schuster, 1994. 320 pages. ISBN 0671-79424-8

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
December 1, 1994

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Dos and Don’t of Historic Preservation on Campus

Restoring fine old buildings is now easier and less expensive, with the right planning.

From Volume 23 Number 2 | Winter 1994–1995

Abstract: While historic preservation of campus architecture has become widely supported within the last generation, it has at the same time become more complicated. Ehrenkrantz and Eckstut have suggested a three part planning strategy. Part one: planners should gather basic informationon each campus building. Next each part of the building should be rated for preservation. 1 might mean a detail or space of great importance which should be carefully restored, while 5 might be an unimportant space which should be modernized to suit current needs. Part two: A phased plan should be develop which spans the next decade with proirities established and a clear sequence including cost estimates. Flexibility should be built into renovations and new construction as anticipation of further renovation. Part three: The next step is to identify athe means and methods weighing such as availability of materials and suitablility of today's program. If a preservation campaign is well planned it can be done well at the same cost of even under the cost of new construction, and will demonstrate the respect for history and culture embodied in the institution.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
December 1, 1994

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The Changing Milieu of Education Planning

From Volume 23 Number 2 | Winter 1994–1995

Abstract: Six major changes may alter the directions of collegiate planning in the next decade. Subtitles: Seismic shifts in society; The consequences of change; The big problem with truth. Pull quotes: "The U.S. population is becoming more polarized." "Electronic technology offers a new kind of book." "Some institutions now give back one-third of their tuition revenues." "We live in an age of disenchantment."

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
December 1, 1994

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Getting Ready for a More Electronic University

From Volume 23 Number 2 | Winter 1994–1995

Abstract: Book review: The Electronic Word: Democracy, technology, and the Arts, by Richard Lanham. University of Chicago Press, 1993. 278 pages. ISBN 0-2326-46883-6. Also available in a hypertext edition.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
December 1, 1994

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Landscapes, Work, and, People

From Volume 23 Number 2 | Winter 1994–1995

Abstract: Book review: A Sense of Place, A Sense of Time, by John Brinckerhoff Jackson. Yale University Press, 1994. 205 pages. ISBN 0-300-06002-5.

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