No Steller sea lions?
Footnotes maybe included in word count for MS Word but not Google docs? Pretty sure I had a similar discrepancy for that reason (and congrats!)
For the Bluesky Pogues catalog - rare French ticket stub
Intoduce yourself with 5 concerts you’ve seen
Blondie
Black Uhuru
Dead Kennedys
Joan Armatrading
The Pogues
You may not be able to wrap up a good life, but the books in our "Inspiring Ideas for Living Well" gift guide offer abundant wisdom for someone to find a path to living well themselves.
Explore our selections and save 30% with code PUP30: press.princeton.edu/collections/...
#GiftGuide #ReadUP
Vikings also begins with V, and the Vikings were in England, so that settles it.
For the brochure
- I Will Always Love You by Dolly Parton. Sort of a professional version, to her former manager, of the love-song break-up:
“Good-bye, please don't cry
'Cause we both know that I'm not
What you need”
For @chronicle.com, @wildavsky.bsky.social, author of The Career Arts, spoke with Alexander C. Kafka about networking for college students:
After the pardons came the purge: The people who beat police officers and tried to block the democratic transfer of power were spared. The people who did their jobs by prosecuting them for their crimes were punished. Dan Barry @alanfeuer.bsky.social www.nytimes.com/2025/08/24/n...
Lmk whether Bobby Zimmerman ever visited Winona and encountered antisemitism?
Don't know that one, but remember @princetonupress.bsky.social also has amazing nature books, including birds!
This is why I can't endorse the Manhattan Statement (a declaration about higher ed organized by Christopher Rufo of the Manhattan Institute), even though I share some of its goals. www.theunpopulist.net/p/a-manhatta...
Tomorrow (May 5) at 11:30 am PDT: @wildavsky.bsky.social, author of The Career Arts, will be moderating @milkeninstitute.org's Global Conference 2025 panel, "Upskill Battle: The Race to Rewire America's Workforce."
For more details, visit:
Soviet Virginia is not for lovers.
Kathleen deLaski recently appeared on @wildavsky.bsky.social's #HigherEdSpotlight podcast and spoke about her new book, WHO NEEDS COLLEGE ANYMORE? Listen to the conversation here: https://bit.ly/4hN3HEl
New #HigherEdSpotlight podcast episode with Kathleen deLaski, author of "Who Needs College Anymore?"
"[College] doesn’t serve the needs of many. There’s a reason only 38 percent of American adults have a degree." —Kathleen deLaski in an interview with @wildavsky.bsky.social for @washingtonmonthly.com https://bit.ly/3XhKOlo
Beautiful. Here’s my own amateur effort: the South Island robin, also known as the kakaruai, taken on the Routeburn Track in New Zealand
For @washingtonmonthly.com, The Career Arts author @wildavsky.bsky.social spoke with Kathleen deLaski for her new book Who Needs College Anymore? and about how college isn’t right for everyone: washingtonmonthly.com/2025/02/20/w...
A new book asks how to make higher education not only more accessible but more applicable to Americans’ real lives. @wildavsky.bsky.social sits down with the author:
Great conversation w/Kathleen deLaski about her new book Who Needs College Anymore? for this @washingtonmonthly.com Q&A. She calls for a much more expansive definition of college, and better alternatives for “new majority learners” who haven’t been well-served by traditional higher ed.
It’s been 15 years since The Great Brain Race by @wildavsky.bsky.social published! Listen to his conversation with Alex Usher for The World of Higher Education about the progress and challenges in global higher education: worlded.transistor.fm/episodes/the...
Was my take on higher ed globalization too optimistic when I published “The Great Brain Race” with @princetonupress.bsky.social 15 years ago? I argue that the principle of “free trade in minds” still holds in this fun video podcast with @alexusherhesa.bsky.social
My Q&A with Nicholas Lemann in the new issue of @educationnext.bsky.social - the case for testing content over aptitude to promote mass access. Adapted from our recent #HigherEdSpotlight conversation.
My new essay in @chronicle.com's special report on experiential learning highlights innovative approaches to career preparation: collaboration with employers in 🇨🇦 Canada, lifelong learning in 🇸🇬 Singapore, degree-apprenticeships in 🇩🇪 Germany, and microcredentials in 🇳🇿 New Zealand. Feedback welcome!
Is there a trade off between going to college and gaining practical skills for a career? ⬇️🎧
@princetonupress.bsky.social #HigherEducation #AcademicSky
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/t...