Artikel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert
Erfordert eine Authentifizierung
Great Expectations versus Great Recession: A Necessary Opposition?
-
Amanda C. Weldy
Veröffentlicht/Copyright:
2. März 2010
In todays economy, college administrators face challenges in guiding their students towards future careers. Jobs appear scarce, and recent graduates lament that their education no longer seems to hold the weight with future employers that motivated them to go to college. This article proposes that in the midst of the Great Recession, standards of success have shifted slightly so that having a job, rather than having a particular job, is now a mark of achievement, manifesting in a slightly more optimistic feeling about staking a place in the world beyond college.
Published Online: 2010-3-2
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Artikel in diesem Heft
- From the Editors
- From Self to Others: Moral Development as the Art of Making and Sustaining Friendships in College
- Invited Featured Article
- Collegiate Dreams and Expectations Meet Hard Times
- Finances, Family, Friends, and Faith: Sources of Concern and Hope for Today's College Women
- Approaches to Religious Differences
- Peer Reviewed Article
- Room at the Table: Cornille and the Possibility for Religious Dialogue
- Examining the Culture of Academic Integrity: A Study of Risk Factors
- The Phenomenon of Character Development in a Distance Education Course
- Capitalizing on Personal Strengths in College
- Opinions and Perspectives
- Responding to Religious Diversity: Some Possible Directions for the Interfaith Youth Core
- Best Practices
- Into the FYRE: The First-Year Residential Experience at the University of Miami--A Housing Strategy for Student Learning and Success
- Ethical Issues on Campus
- An Uncomfortable Intersection
- Spirituality on Campus
- Social Engagement in an Evangelical Campus Ministry: The Case of Urbana 2006
- New Scholars and Scholarship
- Measuring Dialogue Across Difference as a Civic Skill
- International Perspectives
- Being Effective Interventionists to Foster Student Global Citizenship
- Students' Reflections on Moral Conflicts in College
- Great Expectations versus Great Recession: A Necessary Opposition?
- Crossing the Bridge - A Lesson about the Meaning of Hope
- Sustaining Hope Through College
Artikel in diesem Heft
- From the Editors
- From Self to Others: Moral Development as the Art of Making and Sustaining Friendships in College
- Invited Featured Article
- Collegiate Dreams and Expectations Meet Hard Times
- Finances, Family, Friends, and Faith: Sources of Concern and Hope for Today's College Women
- Approaches to Religious Differences
- Peer Reviewed Article
- Room at the Table: Cornille and the Possibility for Religious Dialogue
- Examining the Culture of Academic Integrity: A Study of Risk Factors
- The Phenomenon of Character Development in a Distance Education Course
- Capitalizing on Personal Strengths in College
- Opinions and Perspectives
- Responding to Religious Diversity: Some Possible Directions for the Interfaith Youth Core
- Best Practices
- Into the FYRE: The First-Year Residential Experience at the University of Miami--A Housing Strategy for Student Learning and Success
- Ethical Issues on Campus
- An Uncomfortable Intersection
- Spirituality on Campus
- Social Engagement in an Evangelical Campus Ministry: The Case of Urbana 2006
- New Scholars and Scholarship
- Measuring Dialogue Across Difference as a Civic Skill
- International Perspectives
- Being Effective Interventionists to Foster Student Global Citizenship
- Students' Reflections on Moral Conflicts in College
- Great Expectations versus Great Recession: A Necessary Opposition?
- Crossing the Bridge - A Lesson about the Meaning of Hope
- Sustaining Hope Through College