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Surviving, and Triumphing, after a Campus Rape

My friend Beth Adubato was raped in 1981 in her dorm room at the College of William and Mary after...

Why Does Facebook Want Our Kids?

In the New York Times article, "Why Does Facebook Want Our Kids," the on-going micro debate about the Child Online...

Attention Academics

Women in the media. The latest news for the academic audience News about women always represents a big part of...

Math Geek Mom: Two different approaches

One of the things I like most about math and teaching math is that there are often several different ways to get to an answer. For example, if one wanted to differentiate the square of a binomial function, one could multiply (FOIL) it out and then take the derivative, or one could use the product rule or even the chain rule. I often show students how the same answer can be arrived at in multiple ways, filling the board with several different calculations that miraculously all give the same value in the end. It is then that I am tempted to write the letters “Q.E.D.” on the board, which, as we used to joke in graduate school, is Latin for “ta da!”

EDUCAUSE EdTech: 5 Observations

EDUCAUSE manages to cram in many different meeting experiences during a single conference. We go to EDUCAUSE to learn best...

Ask the Administrator: Know When to Hold ‘Em, Know When to Fold ‘Em

A new correspondent writes: I'm a new hire in my second year at a large community college in the Mid-Atlantic region. During my first year I largely kept my eyes and ears open and my mouth shut as I adjusted to a new workplace with its own culture, policies, and personnel. Tenure reviews from my committee and student evaluations were glowing, and overall, everyone seems pretty glad they hired me. During that first year and more recently I've seen a few things going on that I don't agree with or have strong opinions about. Some are issues at the district level, some at the college level, and some are within my own division. This year I've started speaking up in division meetings and in conferences, trying to offer solutions and different points of view rather than point fingers. The feedback from fellow faculty has been positive - they like that I'm speaking up, even if they don't necessarily agree with me all the time. Various members of the administration, however, have taken notice as well and the feedback from them hasn't been as positive. I suspect they prefer the 'company guy' they saw in my first year rather than this new guy with his opinions (which on occasion are diametrically opposed to those of administration). Do you have any tips on how to navigate tenure while still maintaining my self respect? I can't abide muzzling myself for another two years, but I don't want to get pegged as a troublesome faculty member by administration and risk not getting tenure either.

Occupy Knowledge: It's Ours, After All

Among the recurring images from Occupy Wall Street demonstrations are the signs held by young people tallying their college debt...

EDUCAUSE Day #1 Observations

Looking forward to hearing your take-aways and observations from EDUCAUSE. A few un-filtered reactions from day 1: Godin's Keynote: I'm of two minds on Seth Godin's keynote, "Invisible or Remarkable?" The keynote was hugely enjoyable.