Available Formats
Scholarly Leadership in Higher Education: An Intellectual History of James Bryant Conant
By (Author) Professor Wayne J. Urban
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
21st October 2021
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
378.111092
Paperback
240
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
336g
Urban provides an intellectual history of Harvard presidency of James Bryant Conant (1933-1953), situating it within the broader international landscape and drawing out the implication for the current state of higher education with reference to specific leadership policy issues in the sector. Throughout this volume, Urban explores the ways in which Conant achieved largely successful attempts to modernize Harvard by upgrading both its student body and its faculty. He explores the intellectual excellence agenda that Conant pursued both with students and academics, and the ramifications of this. He also considers the nature of Conants part-time handling of the role of president, the way he delegated campus control to his Provost, Paul Buck, and the ways the two operated together and separately. Urban also looks at Conants own intellectual breadth, as scientist and humanist, which showed itself prominently in his activities in pursuit of general education reform. Conants combination of intellect and agenda was unusual for a president in his own time, and is exceedingly rare, if not completely missing, in contemporary university presidencies. In exploring this innovative presidents time in office at Harvard, Urban offers pertinent ideas to todays leaders of higher education.
Wayne J. Urbans study of Harvards James B. Conant offers an incisive look at one of the great academic leaders of the last century. This is an important addition to the history of education written by one of the fields best scholars * Christopher P. Loss, Associate Professor of History, Public Policy and Higher Education, Vanderbilt University, USA *
Wayne J. Urban is Emeritus Professor at the University of Alabama, USA.