Archives: Newsletter Post
Patience and Purpose in the Pursuit of Personal Projects
“What are your personal strengths and weaknesses?” is a common question posed to students in applications for admittance to programs, internships, or leadership positions culminating is the question being tendered when interviewing for jobs. Students tend to describe themselves with a plethora of virtues articulating their strengths, such as kindness, leadership, integrity, generosity, or perseverance, […]
The Naked Don’t Fear the Water
In The Naked Don’t Fear the Water, Matthieu Aikins recounts his experience traveling undercover with his Afghan friend, Omar, who hopes to resettle as a refugee in Europe. They journey on the smuggler’s road, buying passage through deserts, mountains and over the sea, and living in refugee camps and other makeshift communities along the way. As the […]
Life Worth Living and the Purpose of Higher Education
In 2014, Miroslav Volf and Ryan McAnnally-Linz at the Yale Center for Faith & Culture piloted Life Worth Living, an undergraduate course that asks what it means for life to be lived well and encourages students to ask questions of meaning by engaging seven diverse traditions: the Buddha, the Torah and the Hebrew prophetic and […]
Higher Education Through Life’s Journey
When Michael Burton finished more than two decades working as a judge in St. Louis, he knew he still wanted to do meaningful work, but he did not know what that would look like. “I became the presiding judge one week before Covid began, so, to put it mildly, the past year and a half […]
All About Me: Reframing the Purpose of Higher Education
Should college be an “all about me” experience? In our just published book, The Real World of College: What Higher Education Is and What It Can Be, Howard Gardner and I report on findings of a ten-year study of higher education in the United States. The study draws on more than 2000 in-depth interviews with the […]
The End of Burnout
Former professor Jonathan Malesic’s new book, The End of Burnout, weaves his own story of academic burnout with the history, science, and philosophy of burnout as a concept. In the second half of the book, he considers alternatives to the current cultural conception of work. Different chapters highlight people who are outside the mainstream work culture, […]
From Journalism to Business: Cultivating Virtues Through Different Disciplines at OU
Last semester at the University of Oklahoma, students in courses ranging from quantitative analysis to Chinese language experienced syllabi that were redesigned to make intellectual virtues central to the course content. As part of a grant from the John Templeton Foundation to the Institute for the Study of Human Flourishing at the University of Oklahoma, […]
Now What Ought We Do?
Those needed to teach, advise, persuade, weigh arguments those urgently needed for the work of perception work of the poet, astronomer, the historian, architect of new streets work of the speaker who also listens meticulous delicate work of reaching the heart of the desperate woman, the desperate man —never-to-be-finished, still unbegun work of repair—it cannot […]
What Universities Owe Democracy
“We cannot be blithe about democracy’s prospects. It is incumbent upon our fellow citizens and our bulwark institutions to look unflinchingly and intensely at how we came to this place where our democracy feels as if it is coming undone. There is no better place to start this conversation, this self-reflection, than the university.” – […]
Podcasts Worth Exploring
Need inspiration to continue your good work? Here is a round-up of some of the podcasts tackling virtue & vocation that we particularly enjoyed this year. The Human Doctor Official description: “Dr. Kimberly Manning and Dr. Ashley McMullen are two dope academic internists who use the power of storytelling to explore the human side of medicine, […]