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+This is from Westwood's wiki, not mine, but I'm just uploading it. |
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+Endowments are high now but dropping rapidly - protests are alienating alumni donors, who are of older generations. |
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+Hartocollis 8/4 (Anemona Hartocollis. Anemona Hartocollis is a metro reporter who began covering courts for The New York Times in October 2005. On the courts beat, she has written front-page stories about the trial of accused Gambino crime family leader John Gotti, which ended in a hung jury, and the trial of 18 "grannies" acquitted of disorderly conduct during a demonstration against the war in Iraq. From 2002 until 2005, Ms. Hartocollis wrote the “Coping” column in the Sunday City section, a weekly column about life in New York City. From 1997 until 2002, she covered education for the Times, writing about policy issues like whether parents in Greenwich Village should be allowed to pay for a public-school teacher out of their own pockets and the pros and cons of testing school children. Before coming to the Times, Ms. Hartocollis had been a reporter and feature writer for The New York Daily News, New York Newsday, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Detroit News, The Staten Island Advance and Flatbush Life, a weekly paper in Brooklyn. She has freelanced for Martha Stewart Living and LIFE magazines. Ms. Hartocollis was born on November 3, 1955 in Lausanne, Switzerland. She received her bachelor’s degree in comparative literature from Harvard University in 1977. She has won the Newswomen’s Club of New York Front Page Award (twice); the New York State AP Writing Contest, first place for continuing coverage of education (1996), first place features (1992) and third place features (1995); the Society of Silurians investigative reporting award and the Deadline Club of New York award, among others. Ms. Hartocollis is the author of “Seven Days of Possibilities: One Teacher, 24 Kids, and the Music that Changed Their Lives Forever,” (Public Affairs, 2004) a book about a young music teacher in the Bronx, which began as a series of stories in the Times. “College Students Protest, Alumni’s Fondness Fades And Checks Shrink”. 08-04-2016. New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/05/us/college-protests-alumni-donations.html?_r=1) |
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+Scott MacConnell cherishes |
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+according to the college. |
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+Endowments key to education quality and accessibility to marginalized bodies – turns case. |
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+ACE 14 The American Council on Education is a U.S. higher education organization established in 1918., 2014, " Understanding College and University Endowments," http://www.acenet.edu/news-room/Documents/Understanding-Endowments-White-Paper.pdf |
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+An endowment is |
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+at current prices. |
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+ |
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+Diversity outweighs and turns the case – calls into question how we view and assess learning and challenges traditional institutional values. |
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+Chang 2 Chang, Mitchell J. "Perservation or Transformation: Where's the Real Educational Discourse on Diversity?." The Review of Higher Education 25.2 (2002): 125-140. |
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+Historically, postsecondary institutions |
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+impact on learning. |
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+It’s the biggest impact under their framework – their framework assumes that discursive spaces need to be inculcated but if students with diverse perspectives can’t even come to the college in the first place it’s impossible. |