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AAC&U officers and staff
regularly travel throughout the country, and occasionally
the world, to speak and consult at AAC&U member schools
through seminars, institutes, and workshops as well as in
more informal gatherings. AAC&U staff also regularly speak
on the value of liberal education at various media and public
affairs events. These meetings are an opportunity for the
membership to influence the direction of AAC&U's initiatives.
We look forward to seeing you the next time we are on your
campus.
On
March 25, Alma Clayton-Pedersen, vice president for
Education and Institutional Renewal, attended the
Visiting (Fulbright) Scholar Conference of the Council for
the International Exchange of Scholars, where she presented
and moderated a panel on selective admissions and the persistent
impact of past discrimination. On March 29, she co-presented
a session on “Challenges Confronting Academic and Student
Affairs” with Gwendolyn Dungy, executive director of
the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators
(NASPA), at NASPA’s annual meeting.
On March 29, David Tritelli,
AAC&U associate editor, attended a meeting held
by the National Commission on Writing in America’s Schools
and Colleges in Washington, DC. The commission is seeking
advice on the best ways to implement the recommendations of
its report, The Neglected R: The Need for a Writing Revolution.
Andrea Leskes, vice
president for Education and Quality Initiatives,
will travel to St. Joseph’s University in Philadelphia
on April 6 to speak about Greater Expectations in
relation to curriculum and general education. On April 17
she will give the closing plenary at the meeting of the Quality
in Undergraduate Education project in Denver. She will visit
St. Mary’s University in San Antonio on April 26 and
27, where she will serve on the SACS accreditation team; the
university is shaping its Quality Enhancement Plan around
the ideas in the Greater Expectations report.
Bridget Puzon, editor of
Liberal Education, spent the month of March
on a professional development leave at the Library of Congress,
to learn oral history. She reviewed tapes and conducted interviews
for the Veterans History Project (VHP) of the Folklife Center.
The Veterans History Project is gathering manuscripts, taped
interviews, letters, and photographs from veterans who served
in World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, and the
Gulf War. Currently, the VHP also is preparing for "Tribute
to a Generation," an event that will be held on the Mall in
conjunction with the dedication of the World War II Memorial.
On April 19, Bridget Puzon
will speak to the faculty at Iona College in New York on the
current higher education initiatives regarding spirituality
on campus.
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