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Example Plans

Published
November 30, 2015

Unit Plan

Private Doctoral/Research University (Massachusetts, United States)

SCUP’s Example Plans Collection Why recreate the wheel? Browse or search the collection of plans and supporting documents from higher ed institutions that can help you and your planning team. If you’d like to share a resource, please reach out.
A robust unit plan developed by the university’s school of global studies.

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ebook

Published
November 24, 2015

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Transforming Higher Education in Afghanistan

Success Amidst Ongoing Struggles

What are the major issues for higher education in a fragile state? Surely they include stability, safety for students and staff, continued access to learning, funding, retaining staff, and maintaining quality. But how can these be achieved?
Abstract: Previous work has shown the vital role of higher education in national development through knowledge production. We know that “the role of tertiary education in the construction of knowledge economies and democratic societies is more influential than ever. Indeed, tertiary education is central to the creation of the intellectual capacity on which knowledge production and utilization depend” (World Bank 2002, p. xvii). How could that be done amid conflict and war in a very fragile state? The author wanted to find out.

What are the major issues for higher education in a fragile state? Surely they include stability, safety for students and staff, continued access to learning, funding, retaining staff, and maintaining quality. But how can these be achieved? Further, does higher education play a role in facilitating stability in a war environment? We will see that it does in many ways.

Fred M. Hayward has drawn on his more than 12 years of experience working closely with the Ministry of Higher Education in Afghanistan to write this reflective narrative. Hayward is a specialist in higher education with more than 25 years of experience as an educator, scholar, senior administrator, and higher education consultant. He was senior associate for the American Council on Education for more than 10 years and executive vice president of the Council on Higher Education Accreditation in 2001 and 2002; he has been a higher education consultant for the World Bank, Carnegie Corporation, Ford Foundation, Academy for Educational Development (AED), USAID, several ministries of education, and numerous universities focusing on higher education change, governance, strategic planning, and accreditation.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
October 1, 2015

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Montessori Meets Millennial Majors

Changing the Fundamental Paradigm of Learning for Higher Education

Educators will increasingly be called upon to recognize that for millennial students the goal of learning is as much about building confidence as competence.

From Volume 44 Number 1 | October–December 2015

Abstract: American universities are engaging to a greater degree in experiential modes of learning—similar to Montessori education—to engage learners from the millennial generation. Faculty and staff at colleges and universities must adjust to new ways of offering active and hands-on elements in academic programs to help prepare students for knowledge acquisition and lifelong discovery.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
October 1, 2015

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Planning for University Crisis Management

The Seven-Step Approach

Good planning will allow good execution in crisis management.

From Volume 44 Number 1 | October–December 2015

Abstract: University “crisis management” can be more effective with prior planning and preparation. Campus leaders need to be sensitive to both the public relations and legal dimensions of the knotty issues they are likely to face. The two authors—an attorney and a public relations executive—identify seven steps that universities should take to be well prepared for that inevitable day when a crisis descends onto their campus without warning.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
October 1, 2015

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Preparing and Adapting Our Campuses for the Effects of Climate Change

While some of us are making the case for greening our campuses by reducing our carbon footprint, a parallel front should be presenting the potential and very real impacts that climate change will have on our campuses.

From Volume 44 Number 1 | October–December 2015

Abstract: Colleges across the United States have become greener, and efforts are underway to enhance their sustainability practices and reduce their carbon footprint. This article is not about the greening of our campuses. It is about planning and preparing for the effects of climate change. It concerns the need to adapt our campuses for the future. This article makes the case that life on our campuses will have to change. We will have no choice. We need to prepare for this change, adapt to it, and reengineer ourselves to be more resilient in the face of it. Moreover, it is our position that it would be fiduciarily and morally derelict not to do so. This article argues that one way to persuade boards of trustees and others within institutions of higher learning that the time to prepare is now is to present the science within the context of the coming effects on our own campuses. This article uses our own campus as a template and makes several suggestions for how to start both the conversation and the planning.

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