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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 2014

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Surveying Perceptions of Chapel Architecture in Relation to Campus Identity

Calvin College as a Case Study

The visual identity of a college is ultimately the result of both a professional’s design principles and users’ own experiences and associations.

From Volume 42 Number 2 | January–March 2014

Abstract: As with all educational institutions, the visual identity of a Christian college results from both a professional’s design principles and users’ own experiences and associations. While the two may be related, they are by no means the same. A logical symbolic center for many Christian campuses, a chapel facilitates religious activity and carries emotional attachments bound up with the community’s sense of place. However, it is not clear how the community members of a Christian college perceive the importance of their chapel relative to the importance placed on it by an architect’s strong campus design principles.
Calvin College, in Grand Rapids, Michigan, serves as a case study, offering an example of how a college community might regard the importance of a chapel building over and against its architect’s strong design principles. The chapel building was not conceived as a primary expression of the college’s visual identity and thus was only incidentally associated with the architect’s overarching vision for the campus. This case study asks if the community of Calvin College perceives the chapel as a powerful campus placemarker contributing to the current visual identity of the institution. The results of this study illustrate that a chapel building can work as an institutional symbol for a Christian college, representing the institution’s identity even when it stands apart from strong campus design principles.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 2014

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Is There a There There?

Online Education and ArchitectureX

ArchitectureX encompasses all of the spaces for learning activities that are not easily replicated online.

From Volume 42 Number 3 | April–June 2014

Abstract: Will online education render the traditional university campus irrelevant? Is there a there there when it comes to online education? What makes the flesh-and-blood, brick-and-mortar material realm still relevant—even essential—to education? While online education has brought with it radical transformation, bringing people together in physical space is and will be essential for student success. The reasons for coming together, however, are changing; institutions must adapt if they are to remain vital. Institutions need to know where they stand. What is their “there”? What can they do “there” that cannot be done online?

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 2014

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Retain Your Students!

The Analytics, Policies and Politics of Reinvention Strategies

It is time for all colleges and universities to marshal the resources needed to make completion our strategic priority.

From Volume 42 Number 3 | April–June 2014

Abstract: Change in higher education is ubiquitous. Accountability, assessment, outcomes, competencies, affordability, and quality continue to be of critical importance to stakeholders, policy makers, students, and communities. A three-part strategy for reinventing the paradigm around student success includes analytics, policies, and politics. As stewards of the future, we all need to be aware of the importance of analytics in developing continuous improvement strategies; the role of policies in supporting the framework that allows us to deliver on the promise of education; and the politics that form the complex environment that must sustain and support new approaches to meeting students’ learning needs.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 2014

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Strategic Planning and Assessment in an Outcomes-based Funding Environment

In an era of more scrutiny and less funding, higher education must be adaptive to the changing environment while also demonstrating accountability.

From Volume 42 Number 3 | April–June 2014

Abstract: The passing of the Complete College Tennessee Act (CCTA) was a watershed moment in how the state’s institutions of higher education operated and would be funded. Under the act, state policy shifted to focus on degree production, efficiency, resourcefulness, and economic growth. This article examines how one public institution prepared itself in a fluctuating leadership climate to navigate a quickly evolving and complex planning environment. It discusses the background and fundamentals of CCTA as they relate to higher education funding, the implications for strategic planning and assessment at the university, and the promises and challenges of new accountability formulas for quality improvement in higher education.

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Planning for Higher Education Journal

Published
April 1, 2014

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Afghanistan Higher Education

The Struggle for Quality, Merit, and Transformation

Has Afghan higher education been transformed? Basically yes, with the caveats noted, and indeed to a surprising degree given its limited resources and the little support it has received.

From Volume 42 Number 2 | January–March 2014

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