What’s new this week:
Carthage College Professor Sara Jensen explains why she teaches math through knitting in this essay for The Conversation, which also ran in The Los Angeles Times and Smithsonian.
Julie Maher, RN and clinical nursing instructor at Carthage College, weighs in on myths about managing labor pains during childbirth for U.S. News & World Report.
Farmer School of Business Professor Geoff Zoeckler shares his expertise on corporate empathy in an Entertainment Weekly article on the show changes at ABC after the Roseanne Barr scandal earlier this year.
After originally appearing in The Conversation last week, Carthage College Professor Angela Dassow’s article on her work identifying individual wolves by their howls also ran in SF Gate and The Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
This week on Inside Higher Ed’s Call to Action blog, read why buying a fridge is a lot like choosing a college.
What we’ve been talking about:
Kylie explains what’s at risk when colleges falsify data to gain a higher ranking.
What’s next on our calendars:
Teresa will present at the Academic Impressions conference “Crafting Presidential Voice: Strategies for Communications and Marketing Teams” on September 17-18 in Milwaukee.
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Read this great @melissakorn piece online yesterday and in print today. Interesting marketing and data analytics application for #highered https://t.co/SOSy1GzDln @WSJ pic.twitter.com/8ddoV8ZRxr
— Teresa Valerio Parrot (@tvparrot) July 16, 2018
In some small towns where local #newspapers are vanishing, college newspapers are filling a void: https://t.co/xTq3nsWEtf
— Kylie Kinnaman (@kylielkinnaman) July 17, 2018
Is There a Right to Know a College Might Close? Massachusetts debates new regulatory requirements in the wake of Mount Ida's closure https://t.co/d0R0Niblmb
— Kristine Maloney (@kristinemaloney) July 16, 2018
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