How Professors Play the Cat Guarding the Cream

Why We're Paying More and Getting Less in Higher Education

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Education & Teaching, Administration
Cover of the book How Professors Play the Cat Guarding the Cream by Richard M. Huber, University Publishing Association
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Author: Richard M. Huber ISBN: 9781461675747
Publisher: University Publishing Association Publication: November 12, 1993
Imprint: University Publishing Association Language: English
Author: Richard M. Huber
ISBN: 9781461675747
Publisher: University Publishing Association
Publication: November 12, 1993
Imprint: University Publishing Association
Language: English

This book is a "must read" for every parent who has ever signed a check for tuition, every student who has ever wondered where all the distinguished professors are hiding, and everyone else who has ever questioned what faculty do with themselves all day.
In this lucid and engaging account, Richard Huber identifies faculty productivity as the major reason why college tuition at America's most prestigious institutions rose at more than twice the rate of inflation throughout the 1980s. He argues that at the heart of the productivity issue lies an organization with two competing aims: research and teaching. The resulting organizational culture majors in genteel delusion.
Huber raises taboo subjects such as increased and differential faculty teaching loads, putting himself at the forefront of the new movement for increased accountability in our colleges. And he does so with humor, grace and empathy as one who has been inside the university. This is controversy with an impish grin!

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

This book is a "must read" for every parent who has ever signed a check for tuition, every student who has ever wondered where all the distinguished professors are hiding, and everyone else who has ever questioned what faculty do with themselves all day.
In this lucid and engaging account, Richard Huber identifies faculty productivity as the major reason why college tuition at America's most prestigious institutions rose at more than twice the rate of inflation throughout the 1980s. He argues that at the heart of the productivity issue lies an organization with two competing aims: research and teaching. The resulting organizational culture majors in genteel delusion.
Huber raises taboo subjects such as increased and differential faculty teaching loads, putting himself at the forefront of the new movement for increased accountability in our colleges. And he does so with humor, grace and empathy as one who has been inside the university. This is controversy with an impish grin!

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