7/16/96

CONTACT: Stanford University News Service (650) 723-2558


New book assesses Education in a Research University

STANFORD ­ A university should be a place of light, of liberty, of learning.
­ Benjamin Disraeli, British politician and author

Since the mid-1800s, when Disraeli set forth this ideal, the research university has become one of the most important institutions of our time. In a new book, Education in a Research University, four Stanford professors have collected 30 essays that analyze various facets of such universities, including the challenges of administration, ongoing changes in teaching and learning, and the impact of university research on society.

The topics were selected in part to reflect the career, contributions and interests of former Stanford Provost Gerald J. Lieberman, to whom the volume is dedicated. Lieberman, who retired in 1995, pioneered the interdisciplinary field of operations research and made numerous contributions to the Stanford community in his more than 40 years at the university, including service as provost or vice provost under three presidents.

The book was edited by Kenneth J. Arrow, professor emeritus of economics; Richard W. Cottle, professor and chairman of operations research; B. Curtis Eaves, professor of operations research; and Ingram Olkin, professor of statistics and education. It includes a foreword by President Gerhard Casper and Provost Condoleezza Rice.

The modern research university, the editors note, seeks to achieve a variety of aims and responds to a multiplicity of pressures. To fulfill its principal obligation ­ to educate students to prepare them to live in and contribute to society ­ knowledge must be collected, organized and disseminated. But also, and in the long run even more important, the editors write, new knowledge must be created, and "the knowledge so developed and so imparted must ultimately be carried into the larger society." The essays assess how the research university meets those challenges.

The varied selection includes writings on faculty retirement; affirmative action in graduate admissions; lessons learned about textbook writing; how linear programming began; and operations research and statistics in manufacturing. Other highlights:

The book was published by Stanford University Press.

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