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17 mai 2015

To Make the World a Better Place, Teach Arabic

By Brian T. Edwards. Seventy-four years ago, Henry Luce published "The American Century," an essay that argued that American culture would play a starring role in creating a global environment in which the United States could thrive. Chief among his examples was American language itself; not just English, but an American-inflected argot that would be carried around the world via music, movies, comics, and popular culture. This was for Luce the sign of an internationalism that Americans themselves hadn’t yet acknowledged.
Today few would doubt that the reach and power of American culture is global, nor that the country is an international power. Colleges take a significantly different approach to teaching about the world than they did in 1941, and American studies has sought to be more global in its outlook. More foreign languages are taught than in Luce’s time, and study abroad has become a rite of passage for many students.
Yet a creeping monolingualism is overtaking higher education, despite the efforts of so many in the trenches. The signs are everywhere: Major universities are closing German departments and cutting Russian and French programs; general foreign-language requirements are easing up. Over all, college language enrollments tumbled 6.7 percent between 2009 and 2013, according to the Modern Language Association. Despite the growth of study abroad, it is increasingly easy for college students to take their courses in English in such countries as Jordan, the Czech Republic, France, and Turkey. The widespread sense that English has become a global lingua franca contributes to an unfortunate sense that learning other languages doesn’t matter.
Arabic is one of the languages that suffers in this climate, both because of its difficulty and the resistance of many language programs to embrace its spoken colloquial forms. Although it has been the fastest-growing language of study since 2001, enrollments fell 7.5 percent between 2009 and 2013. Given the enormous military and political focus on the Middle East, it is urgent that Americans learn Arabic. If the United States is going to try to understand, rather than bomb, invade, and occupy part of the world that has been our government’s central obsession for almost a decade and a half, then more colleges need to teach Arabic and do so in a vibrant way. Higher education has never had a more crucial role to play in achieving peace.
Arabic is the fifth most common native language in the world, with at least 295 million native speakers. And it is spoken in 60 countries, a number second only to English. That means there are jobs out there for those fluent in Arabic, a multitude of opportunities in both the private and public sector, including prospects we have not imagined. But this is not the only reason — or even the primary one — to support the study of Arabic. More...

17 mai 2015

As Concern Over Student-Loan Servicers Grows, a Watchdog Steps Up Scrutiny

By Kelly Field. The nation’s top consumer watchdog is stepping up its oversight of student-loan servicers, the agency announced on Thursday.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which has been monitoring the sector since last March, said it would seek information on practices that "create repayment challenges" or set up "hurdles for distressed borrowers." The agency is also interested in "economic incentives that may affect the quality of service" provided to borrowers, it said in a statement. More...

17 mai 2015

How Ending the Two-Tiered Student-Loan System Would Help Struggling Borrowers

By Ben Miller. Defaulting on a student loan is not pleasant. It wrecks a borrower’s credit, puts her into the unpleasant world of debt collection, and can even result in wages or Social Security benefits being garnished. There are increasing calls to keep down student debt and to create more flexible payment plans to avoid default. More...

17 mai 2015

Math Geek Mom: Beginnings

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/blog_landing/public/mama_phd_blog_header.jpg?itok=C5xGPD1aBy Rosemarie Emanuele. In Geometry, if one took a Cartesian graph with lines donating values of x and y, and wrapped it around a cylinder so that the left side matched up with the right side, the result would be a graph that might still have a highest and lowest value, but would now have no left or right value. Thus, in a sense, there would be no beginning or end, since beginnings and endings no longer exist separate from each other. I found myself thinking of this as we approach our graduation ceremony tonight. Read more...

17 mai 2015

The Problem With Comments

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/blog_landing/public/library_babel_fish_blog_header.jpg?itok=qNL3hM7KBy Barbara Fister. Here are some of the things I believe:

  • There is such a thing as rape culture and it flourishes in the US.
  • White privilege is a problem that is too often invisible to whites.
  • Black lives matter.
  • We messed up the climate and we should cop to it so we can figure out what to do.
  • Gamergate was not about journalism ethics.

For some, these are uncontroversial beliefs, so obvious it's hardly worth mentioning. Read more...

17 mai 2015

Using Social Media to Inspire Your Students

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/large/public/student_affairs_and_technology_blog_header.jpgBy Eric Stoller. Departmental social media accounts are useful for a lot of reasons. As broadcast channels for the masses, these accounts serve as generic info-portals for campus communities. They are search-engine friendly – students can simply search for an office's social media presence – and they serve as consistent content locations. Read more...
17 mai 2015

Taking Stock

By Michael Patrick Rutter and Steven Mintz. This past academic year did not offer anything as attention grabbing as 2012’s advent of MOOCs. Yet profound transformations, nevertheless, have been underway.
A year ago no one would have imagined:
  • That a name-brand university would award academic credit for MOOCs.
  • That a free college education is poised to become a employer benefit.
  • That for-profit universities would be under siege.
  • That free community college tuition and debt-free college graduation would be widely discussed in political circles.
As the 2014-2015 academic year draws to a close, it is well worth reflecting on the developments we have witnessed. Read more...
17 mai 2015

Wasted Potential

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/blog_landing/public/JustVisitingLogo_white.jpg?itok=K5uvzo_-By John Warner. Right now, I feel like I’m just flat out done with the traditional first-year writing “research paper.” I understand its pedagogical purpose in theory, but even after trying a lot of different approaches, I can’t seem to make it do what I want. It is not the capstone to a semester of writing in the academic conversation I wish for, but is instead, an artifact of exhaustion, deposited by students with shrugs, rather than smiles, indifference, rather than pride. Read more...

17 mai 2015

What If Blockbuster Had Had Tenure?

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/blog_landing/public/technology_and_learning_blog_header.jpg?itok=aQthgJ91By Joshua Kim. The case of Blockbuster offers one of my favorite thought experiments for higher ed. In 2004 Blockbuster boasted 9,000 stores worldwide, 60,000 employees, and a market capitalization of $5 billion. Today, Blockbuster is gone. Read more...

17 mai 2015

Confessions of an Early Airport Arriver

http://www.insidehighered.com/sites/default/server_files/styles/blog_landing/public/technology_and_learning_blog_header.jpg?itok=aQthgJ91By Joshua Kim. There are two types of people in the world. Those who arrive to the airport ridiculously early (me), and those who like show up before they lock the jetway door (my wife). Which one are you. Read more...

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