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My Ongoing Love Affair with Skepticism

Magazines aren't something that I generally purchase. However, when I'm at 30,000 feet jet-setting off to my next consulting engagement, or heading home to Boston, magazines are one of my favorite ways to pass the time. On a whim, I recently picked up the April edition of the outrageously priced Harvard Business Review. While reading an article about data and good decisions, one of the headlines made me immediately dog-ear a page and pop open my laptop. Part of the focus of the article was that businesses need to develop "more informed skeptics." My brain immediately leapt over to my "radical student affairs" post and connected skepticism to being a more radical practitioner. Questioning is learning, innovating, and being an agent for change.

No Regrets, Just Some Nostalgia

In years past, I used to worry about what to "do" with Ben during his school breaks. This year, he had to remind me not to wake him up on Friday morning, because the start date of his spring break kept slipping my mind.

Philip G. Altbach: Down the Slippery Slope—The New Commercialism and the Decline of Standards

The United States is truly moving into the era of the commercialization of international higher education. International students, particularly, are being seen as “cash cows” that can bring in needed revenues at a time of austerity.

Lawsuit Fears and Digital Course Materials: 5 Things We Don't Do

How does the fear that you and your institution will get sued for copyright infringement alter the way in which you provide educational materials for your students?

Thoughts I Can’t Shake

The Girl: “If you dug a tunnel to China, would the hole in the earth make a whistling sound as the earth turned?”

Toward A Whole Academic Self

I was born logical and creative and comical and dark and practical and dreamy and compassionate and angry. I was born understanding myself as a whole; I never questioned my own composition. For a long time in my life, I believed that I could be anyone. But lives move forward in choices and in those choices there is growth. Most of those choices are necessary, but some of them are false. It never occurred to me that one day I would have to begin the doppelgängers's dance, the double-walking life of one made to divide one’s self. Again and again in my life I have been presented with a choice that I now know is false: the choice between artist and analyst.

ChromeVox and Project Glass

Google releases innovative ideas and projects seemingly on a daily basis. With their commitment to creativity (and not being evil), Google supplies a steady stream of new tech. Recently, I came across a couple of Google projects that caught my eye.

Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, right?

In that case, Dean Dad, consider yourself flattered, because here are my Friday Fragments.