Remove Fundraising Remove Higher Education Administration Remove Research
article thumbnail

A Scholarship of the Underserved to Inspire Equity

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

McMickens’s scholarship centers on historically marginalized and underserved populations that suffer from inequities, particularly in higher education. The research is rich and ever-manifesting on college campuses for McMickens, an associate professor of higher education and the director of the M.S.Ed.

article thumbnail

Why AI usage is now soaring among higher ed employees

University Business

The higher education technology solutions provider surveyed 445 faculty and administrators from more than 330 institutions across the U.S. and Canada in its second annual “AI in Higher Education Survey” to better understand how leaders perceive its value.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Planning to Meet Your School’s Student and Operational Needs

Higher Ed Connects: Student Success Blogs

Two higher education administrators and an academic consulting firm shared their visions on tailoring their programs to meet student and operational needs: Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, Massachusetts. In his interview with WBUR, the President discussed a $60 million fundraising campaign over five years.

article thumbnail

Leadership Accountability in Higher Ed: Leadership On The Board and Above Board

The Change Leader, Inc.

Scandals concerning student cheating, research, IT hacking, and financial issues have rocked the top offices of the ivory tower. Leadership On The Board and Above Board Leadership issues are not confined to an institutions administration. With that said, its important for boards to take their proper place in higher education.

article thumbnail

President moves: Resignations and early retirements reigned in July

University Business

Marc Tessier-Lavigne – Stanford University Thanks to the shrewd inquiry of a first-year journalism student, Marc Tessier-Lavigne resigned from Stanford University following heavy scrutiny over his academic work’s potentially manipulated scientific research data.

Banking 52