{"id":10181,"date":"2012-06-01t09:22:46","date_gmt":"2012-06-01t15:22:46","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/?p=10181"},"modified":"2012-06-08t09:41:52","modified_gmt":"2012-06-08t15:41:52","slug":"summer-reading-recommendations-from-cft-staff","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.imrbdigital.com\/2012\/06\/summer-reading-recommendations-from-cft-staff\/","title":{"rendered":"summer reading recommendations from cft staff"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a><\/p>\n by cft assistant director\u00a0nancy chick<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n as the year shifts into the relatively quieter rhythms of summer for many of us, we turn to more focused activities like research, reading, and–if we’re lucky–relaxation. we look forward to time alone, or in the library or the lab, or with our families, or in faraway places.<\/p>\n in my 14 years as an english professor and now assistant director at the cft, i’ve always been grateful for the summer’s gift of allowing me to catch up with some old and new favorite books.\u00a0nobel laureate toni morrison<\/a> says that such reading gives us\u00a0“the peace of the dancing mind.” think ballet, rather than the tango: it’s a solitude that invites us “to sit in a room by [ourselves] and read for four hours and have those four hours followed by another four without any companionship but [our] own mind.”<\/p>\n my reading list for the summer ranges from a new entry in a favorite mystery series, to morrison’s new novel home,<\/em> to a handful of work-related books. <\/strong><\/p>\n i asked my colleagues in the 2022年世界杯中国小组赛积分 to recommend a book for others’ summer reading lists. \u00a0let us know what you’re reading, and consider one of the following:<\/p>\n i immediately thought of\u00a0a life in school: what the teacher learned<\/em><\/a><\/strong> by jane tompkins. why? \u00a0tompkins is a literary scholar who finds herself struggling with her unquestioned assumptions about teaching, her students, and her role as a professor in and out of the classroom. \u00a0in writing this educational memoir, she looks back on her own life from kindergarten through graduate school to examine her own values and assumptions as a student–and how they have formed who she became as a professor.<\/p>\n i reread a life in school<\/em> every few years. \u00a0it helps me reflect on my own roles, my most recent students, and my goals for the next few years.<\/p>\n cft director\u00a0derek bruff<\/a> selected\u00a0racing odysseus: a college president becomes a freshman again<\/em><\/a> <\/strong>by roger h. martin. \u00a0he explains,<\/p>\n after surviving cancer, sixty-one-year-old college president roger martin enrolls as a freshman at st. john\u2019s college, a \u201cgreat books\u201d liberal arts college in maryland.\u00a0 in this memoir, martin describes and reflects on his experiences that year, including taking classes, making friends with students, and joining the crew team.\u00a0 martin offers an engaging look at the undergraduate experience, the value of a liberal arts education, and the challenges of getting older.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n <\/p>\n cft assistant director\u00a0joe bandy<\/a> recommends\u00a0deadly professors: a faculty development mystery<\/em><\/a><\/strong>, the latest by thomas jones, and offers this description:<\/p>\n jones has worked as\u00a0a professor of history, an administrator, and a faculty development director, and is coauthor of\u00a0promoting active learning: strategies for the college classroom<\/em> (1993). \u00a0in books that blur the boundary between mystery and non-fiction essays,\u00a0deadly professors<\/em> and his earlier book,\u00a0the missing professor<\/em>,\u00a0jones uses the vehicle of a fictionalized crime mystery to discuss important dimensions of faculty life, including the ideals of liberal education, student culture, technology and the classroom, sports in campus life, academic freedom, and other topics sure to resonate with anyone who works in higher education.<\/p>\n deadly professors<\/em> does not pretend to be great literature, nor does it have the absurdities or sardonic wit of, say, don delillo’s\u00a0white noise<\/em>, a biting satire of higher education. \u00a0however, in its irreverent and playful views on faculty life, it is a quick and easy read for summer that nonetheless provides some food for thought among those who struggle with various dimensions of faculty life.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n <\/p>\n cft educational consultant milt cox<\/a> offers his plans for summer (re)reading as his recommendation:<\/p>\nwhat’s on your summer reading list? <\/em><\/h3>\n