Archives: Newsletter Post
What is Higher Education?
In virtue of what are universities institutions of higher education? Surely it means more than higher in the number of years in school, more than higher in its demands on student attention and effort, and it certainly ought to mean more than higher in its costs, financial or otherwise. I would hope that a university […]
No Cure for Being Human (And Other Truths I Need to Hear)
Kate Bowler’s latest memoir, No Cure for Being Human (And Other Truths I Need to Hear), intersects with Virtues & Vocations’ emphasis on moral purpose in and beyond one’s profession. This second book about Bowler’s life after being diagnosed with stage IV cancer at age 35 particularly engages with the ways her heightened sense of mortality […]
Mercer Law School Requires Virtue Ethics First-Year Course
For more than fifteen years, Mercer Law School has pioneered a virtue ethics approach to professional identity formation within the legal profession by requiring all first-year students to take a course in professional identity that focuses on developing practical wisdom. With the American Bar Association considering an amendment to its accreditation requirements to require a […]
Can Virtue be Taught? Practical Wisdom and Engaged Learning
We were on the bus at sunrise in Immokalee, Florida —students and a fellow faculty member with migrant workers on the way to pick oranges for the day. We were part of an experiential Migrant Experiences Seminar I began in the 1990s at the University of Notre Dame to experience first hand migrant life and the complexities […]
The Way of Medicine: Ethics and the Healing Profession
“Medicine has lost its way because it lacks clarity about where the way should lead. We no longer have a shared public understanding of what medicine is for, of what the end of medicine is or should be.” In The Way of Medicine, Farr Curlin and Christopher Tollefsen offer a teleological approach to medicine. They consider the good […]
Virtues of the Mind
Why do we teach? For those of us involved in higher education, answers to this question are bound to vary. We may teach because we’re required to. Or because we desire to impart disciplinary knowledge and skills to our students. Or because we want to equip them for successful careers. Our reasons for teaching may […]
A Round of Golf With My Father
Published June 2021 Growing up, Stanford Education Professor William Damon believed his father had died in World War II. His father actually chose not to return, and established a new life and family for himself overseas. Over the years, there were clues that the family line about a deceased father was not true, but Damon […]
Making Caring Common Through Innovations in Higher Education
The Making Caring Common project at the Harvard Graduate School of Education has been working for about 8 years to elevate the importance of raising caring, justice-minded children and to provide resources to teachers and parents to encourage children to care about others and the common good, treat people well day to day, and come […]
Re-imagining Tech Fellowship Encourages Engineering and Computer Science Students Toward Moral Purpose in Work
This summer, 18 Duke undergraduates pursuing majors in engineering or computer science are exploring the ways moral purpose and character are central to what it means to do good work in technical fields. The Re-Imagining Tech Fellowship includes weekly meetings with readings, speakers and activities that confront the idea that engineers and computer scientists are neutral, and […]
Bad Deaths: An Ounce of Prevention
If the COVID-19 pandemic has brought into focus one truth about modern life, it’s that we are more concerned with the quick fix than slow preventative work. We’ll take that pound of cure any day, so long as we don’t have to contribute an ounce of prevention. Clinicians know this to be the case with […]