Home
the New Education: How to Revolutionize University Prepare Students for a World Flux
Barnes and Noble
the New Education: How to Revolutionize University Prepare Students for a World Flux
Current price: $25.19
Barnes and Noble
the New Education: How to Revolutionize University Prepare Students for a World Flux
Current price: $25.19
Size: Audiobook
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
“One of the most thoughtful voices from within academia” (
Washington Post
) argues the American university is stuck in the past—and shows how we can revolutionize it
We’re living in a period of great upheaval—yet there hasn't been a corresponding change in our system of higher education. In
The New Education
, Cathy N. Davidson argues we need a new theory and practice of learning that emphasizes achievement not as a score on a test but as the ability to navigate a job market—and a world—in constant flux. Davidson offers lessons for remaking higher education for our own time, for every institution from the Ivy League to the poorest community college.
Now with a new introduction that addresses the benefits and challenges of remote learning and an appendix that offers practical advice on how institutions can change,
is essential reading for educators, parents, and students. Davidson deftly shows how we can teach students not only to survive but to thrive in the twenty-first-century economy.
Washington Post
) argues the American university is stuck in the past—and shows how we can revolutionize it
We’re living in a period of great upheaval—yet there hasn't been a corresponding change in our system of higher education. In
The New Education
, Cathy N. Davidson argues we need a new theory and practice of learning that emphasizes achievement not as a score on a test but as the ability to navigate a job market—and a world—in constant flux. Davidson offers lessons for remaking higher education for our own time, for every institution from the Ivy League to the poorest community college.
Now with a new introduction that addresses the benefits and challenges of remote learning and an appendix that offers practical advice on how institutions can change,
is essential reading for educators, parents, and students. Davidson deftly shows how we can teach students not only to survive but to thrive in the twenty-first-century economy.