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Management
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Understanding Higher Education: Lessons From a British Customs Agent
Dr. Brian C. Mitchell
As a new president in the 1990s, one of my early tasks was to sign an exchange agreement with a private Russian university. The provost and I completed our business in Moscow and headed through London to visit a second exchange program of long-standing with a British institution.
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MOOCs: If We're Not Careful, So-Called Open Courses Will Close Minds
The Guardian
Massive open online courses, or Moocs, will probably turn out to be little more than an edu-tainment 'bubble', says Peter Scott
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Congress OKs Cheaper Student Loans
CNN Money
The House on Wednesday approved a bipartisan that ensures lower interest rates on loans for students heading to college this fall.
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Ohio State Gives Its Ex-President Another Job
The New York Times
E. Gordon Gee, who resigned as president of Ohio State University in June after a series of gaffes attracted media attention, will earn $5.8 million over the next five years under a new contract with the university that calls for him to continue as a tenured member of the law school faculty, conduct research on education policy and serve as president emeritus. Under his previous contract, Mr. Gee would have earned about $6 million over the next four years. Mr. Gee, 69, frequently topped the list of highest-paid college presidents.
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The Future of Business Education in an Interdependent World
Forbes
At the center of business education today, says Bill Boulding – dean of Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business – lies a paradox. “There’s more of an opportunity to make positive changes through business than ever,” he says. “Business will be the transformational engine of the 21st century. Yet business leaders have never been held in lower regard than they have today. That means we have an incredible opportunity: how do we produce leaders who will be trusted and who can make the changes we need in the world?”
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