Education titles sorted by book title (or by release date):
The African Experience with Higher Education
By J. F. Ade Ajayi, Lameck K. H. Goma and G. Ampah JohnsonThere have been institutions of higher learning for centuries in Africa, but the phenomenal growth has taken place in the last fifty years, first in the later days of colonialism and then in the heady days of independence and commodity boom.…
Aquamarine Blue 5
Personal Stories of College Students with Autism
Edited by Dawn Prince-HughesThis is the first book to be written by autistic college students about the challenges they face. Aquamarine Blue 5 details the struggle of these highly sensitive students and shows that there are gifts specific to autistic students that enrich the university system, scholarship, and the world as a whole.…
Constructing Black Education at Oberlin College
A Documentary History
By Roland M. BaumannIn 1835 Oberlin became the first institute of higher education to make a cause of racial egalitarianism when it decided to educate students “irrespective of color.” Yet the visionary college’s implementation of this admissions policy was uneven.…
The Creative Journal
The Art of Finding Yourself
By Lucia CapacchioneA recognized classic in the field of art therapy and creativity, this book is a perfect guide to discovering and releasing your inner potential through writing and drawing. It contains over 50 writing and drawing exercises to help you find and love one's self, get in touch with ones' feelings, and dreams.…
Directing Shakespeare
A Scholar Onstage
By Sidney HomanAn impossible question from a Chinese actor—“Why is Shakespeare eternal?”—drove Sidney Homan after fifty years in the theater to ponder just what makes Shakespeare...well, Shakespeare. The result, Directing Shakespeare, reflects the two worlds in which Homan operates—as a scholar and teacher on campus, and as a director and actor in professional and university theaters.…
Education in the Development of Tanzania, 1919–1990
By Lene BuchertDeals with the realities of education in a debt-ridden African country trying to cope with the pressures of externally imposed educational budgets.
Guest Appearances and Other Travels in Time and Space
By Peter I. RosePeter Rose has spent a lifetime exploring patterns of culture, examining issues of race and ethnicity, working with refugees, teaching sociology, and roaming the world. In Guest Appearances and Other Travels in Time and Space, he reflects on his adventures and the formative experiences that led him to a fascination with lives that seem quite unlike our own.…
Hershey’s Children’s Garden
A Place to Grow
By Maureen HeffernanSince its opening in 1999, the Hershey Children's Garden at Cleveland Botanical Garden has been considered one of the best of the new public children's gardens that are being built throughout the country.…
Negotiating Power and Privilege
Career Igbo Women in Contemporary Nigeria
By Philomina E. OkekeEven with a university education, the Igbo women of southeastern Nigeria face obstacles that prevent them from reaching their professional and personal potentials. Negotiating Power and Privilege is a study of their life choices and the embedded patriarchy and other obstacles in postcolonial Africa barring them from fulfillment.…
Ohio University in Perspective II
The Annual Convocation Addresses of President Charles J. Ping, 1985-1993
By Charles J. Ping“This volume is a companion to Ohio University in Perspective, which brought together the annual convocation addresses of President Ping from the years 1975 through 1984. Like the earlier volume, Ohio University in Perspective II provides an important window onto the world of Ohio University during the president’s second decade of service.…
Teaching Shakespeare into the Twenty-First Century
Edited by Ronald E. Salomone and James E. DavisShakespeare is a central shaping and defining figure in our culture. His plays are being taught, filmed, and performed every day in many places and in most of the world's languages. At the same time, teachers and students from junior high through the early undergraduate years often struggle with the Bard in discomfort and negativity that can only be counter-productive.…
Wanasema
Conversations with African Writers
Edited by Donald BurnessThere is a tendency to regard African literature as a homogenous product. Certainly it is true that African writers have created a vibrant, modern literature. Nevertheless, they come from specific societies and reflect vastly differing worlds.…
Writing in Disguise
Academic Life in Subordination
By Terry CaesarWriting in Disguise is a series of increasingly personal essays that both discuss and dramatize through firsthand experience the significance of subordination in academic life, in terms of issues and structures but above all in terms of texts.…












