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Creating Campus Community: In Search of Ernest Boyer's Legacy

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"We have at our disposal one of the greatest vehicles for...community-building known to humankind--the one called education." --from the foreword by Parker Palmer

"Connecting authentically and deeply with others across all dimensions of life enriches the human spirit. The sense of community resulting from such connections is a hallmark of a supportive campus environment, which we know is an important factor in enhancing student learning. The contributions to this book offer a vision we can work toward and provide instructive examples from different types of institutions to point the way." --George D. Kuh, chancellor's professor and director, National Survey of Student Engagement, Indiana University

"Ernie Boyer was a giant in higher education. This book, a resource guide, focuses on one of his great loves--campus community. The book examines his contributions and offers a compelling agenda for action." --Arthur Levine, president, Teachers College, Columbia University

"This well-written and timely book draws on the lessons learned from five very different institutions as they attempted to address a major challenge to higher education-building effective campus communities. Practitioners will find this to be an invaluable resource and guide as they attempt to bring Ernie Boyer's vision to life on their campuses. A great tribute to one of America's leading educators!" --Charles C. Schroeder, professor of higher education, University of Missouri-Columbia

"There is no topic more important in higher education today than creating campus community. McDonald and his associates have indeed lived up to Ernest Boyer's legacy by presenting us with a remarkable set of campus models for us to admire. . . and emulate." --Yolanda T. Moses, president, American Association for Higher Education

"This book comes at an auspicious time of educational transformation. Like the Boyer Center, this book's fundamental priority in meeting today's challenging new realities is the discovery and creation of new forms of community." --Glen R. Bucher, executive director, the Boyer Center

240 pages, Paperback

First published April 29, 2002

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December 30, 2018
Soul work as vital to the work of higher eduction—yes, a laudable goal and one I strive for in my own teaching—yet frustratingly given lip-service support. My favorite passage from this book: "We need a more capacious view of what community in teaching and learning might mean, which is why I have found myself talking less about community—a word that is so easily reified—and more about a capacity for connectedness. If we ask ourselves critical questions about our own capacity for connectedness and our strategies for developing that capacity in our students, we might discover more and more ways to create community in the classroom without confining the concept to its most conventional forms." p. 186
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