article thumbnail

International Women’s Day: ¼ of the Top 200 Higher Ed Leaders Worldwide are Women

Insight Into Diversity

The 2024 Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings have been released, and analysis reveals that, for the first time, 50 of the top 200 institutions are led by women. Since THE first began collecting data in 2015, the number of women-led institutions has increased from 14% to 25%.

Academia 111
article thumbnail

AAUP Report on Political Interference in Higher Education: Changing Higher Ed Podcast 185 with Host Dr. Drumm McNaughton and Guest Dr. Henry “Hank” Reichman

The Change Leader, Inc.

Investigative Insights: A Deep Dive into the Crisis In preparing this report, over 65 interviews were conducted with various stakeholders, including faculty, students, alumni, and former university presidents. Encourage not only retired but also current university leaders to speak out against political interference.

university leaders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

A Global Shift in Higher Education Requires a New Business Model: Changing Higher Ed Podcast 180 with Drumm McNaughton and Catherine Friday

The Change Leader, Inc.

And when I’m talking high quality digital, content, I’m not just talking about taking,class notes from 2015 and, turning that into a lecture. Three takeaways for university presidents and boards. [00:31:07] So it’s not just taking your analog and making it digital. 00:31:00] Drumm: Absolutely. Am I crazy?

Model 59
article thumbnail

The Impact of Crushing Student Debt on American Society: Causes, Consequences, and Solutions: Changing Higher Education Podcast 164 with Host Dr. Drumm McNaughton and Guest David Linton

The Change Leader, Inc.

But I was drawn into this topic, field, and academia more generally four years ago. David Linton In 2015, the Federal Reserve of New York released a paper, “Credit Supply and the Rise of College Tuition.” What can presidents do? But, frankly, what can boards and presidents do to hold the line on tuition? Sorry, William.