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I have the pleasure of teaching my PhD class in higher education finance again at Tennessee this summer. The last three times that I taught the course ( spring 2022 , spring 2020 , and fall 2017 ), I shared my reading list for the class on this blog. The higher education finance landscape and data sources Chetty, R., Kelchen, R.,
Blog: Learning Innovation The first draft of this blog post was written before I published a post on 1/22 titled How Do Academic Libraries Spend Their Money? The idea that academic librarybudgets are fungible shows ignorance of how these budgets work. Probably some change in how library staff are counted.
I am teaching a remote synchronous PhD class in higher education finance as my first course at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. The last two times that I taught the course ( spring 2020 and fall 2017 ), I shared my reading list for the class on this blog. The higher education finance landscape and data sources.
[Editor's note: This article first appeared at the Kelchen on Education blog.] This spring, I get to teach my PhD class in higher education finance again—the eighth time that I have taught it in my eleven-year faculty career. The higher education finance landscape and data sources Chetty, R., Understanding budgets.
The topics covered included student success, budget models, change management, and more. The blog posts below are written by the participants to showcase their project and early outcomes. Note: The views and opinions in the blog post are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views or opinions of EAB.
Melanie Booth (13:29.902) you Matthew Sterenberg (13:33.023) look different or maybe I want to manage people, right? And we have models of this happening in libraries. that had a leadership development program that they did for all their managers to kind of step up into higher paying but also higher responsibility leadership positions.
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