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How
can college and university presidents be persuasive to students
and their parents about the benefits of a college education as well
as to external constituents who question its cost or its substance?
How can presidents decide which of the major shifts in societal
values—in environmental sustainability or internationalism
or social justice, for example—ought to be reflected in the
internal values of the institution? How can presidents spur the
implementation of such major changes? These were some of the questions
and challenges explored at the 2008 CIC Presidents Institute, held
January 4–7 in Marco Island, Florida.
This year’s
meeting again set a record for participation of presidents (334)
and spouses (192). In recent years, the Institute has become the
largest annual conference in the U.S. of college and university
presidents. Major speakers included Howard Gardner of Harvard University
who discussed “Five Minds for the Future: Intellectual and
Ethical Dimensions”; Ray Anderson, founder and chairman of
Interface, and Anthony Cortese, president of Second Nature and co-director
of the American College and University Presidents Climate Commitment,
who together explored “Higher Education Leadership to Create
a Healthy, Just, and Sustainable Society”; and Ann Austin
of Michigan State University, who coauthored Rethinking Faculty
Work (2007) and addressed that topic. Closing speakers Robert
Berdahl, president of the Association of American Universities,
and Stephen Trachtenberg, president emeritus and university professor
of public service of George Washington University, explored the
future of higher education and whether there are aspects of higher
education that need to be “revalued.”
For the first
time, a number of the Institute’s sessions were covered by
reporters from the Chronicle of Higher Education and InsideHigherEd.com.
Many of the presentations and the media coverage are available
here on CIC’s website.
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