The Heart of Higher Education: A Call to RenewalISBN: 978-0-470-48790-7
Hardcover
256 pages
July 2010, Jossey-Bass
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” —Alexander and Helen Astin, Higher Education Research Institute, UCLA
“At a moment when many are dreaming of an integrative form
of higher education that unites intellectual rigor with compassion
and love, Palmer and Zajonc invite us to engage in conversations
designed to infuse the academy with meaning, purpose, and soul. For
those who yearn to transform colleges and universities from
sterile, vacuous spaces to places of hope, possibility, and respect
for everything human, this is the book you have been waiting
for.”
—Laura I. Rendón, professor of higher education, Iowa
State University, and author, Sentipensante Pedagogy: Educating
for Wholeness, Social Justice and Liberation
“Parker Palmer and Arthur Zajonc call for a renewal of our
commitment to inspiring deeper thinking and educating the whole
person. This book should and will inspire debate about our larger
purpose, about how we can go beyond the traditional silos in which
we work for the sake of individual and institutional
transformation.”
—Anthony Marx, president, College
“What should be at the center of our teaching and our
students’ learning? Palmer and Zajonc take up this simple but
daunting question and provide the most solid ground yet on which to
hold a conversation about the heart of our enterprise. They
reimagine higher education in a way commensurate with the magnitude
of our problems and offer us practical paths toward implementation.
Integrative education is the most important reformation of higher
learning since the rise of the modern university. This book can
help us achieve it.”
—Anthony Lising Antonio, associate professor of education and
associate director, Stanford Institute for Higher Education
Research, Stanford University
“[The book] strikes a welcome balance between theoretical
claims and practical applications. I find [it] a worthy read for
anyone interested in asking the deeper questions about what it
means to educate an undergraduate. I encourage you to find the
paragraphs that resonate most deeply with you, and to do the one
thing the authors ask of us: have a meaningful conversation about
higher education with a few colleagues. For, as they put it,
‘renewal…will germinate first in the soil of these
caring and collegial conversations.’”
—Allison Gale, Departmental Teaching Fellow for Earth and
Planetary Sciences, for The Bok Blog