• Home
  • About
    • Public Ed Works: 10th Anniversary Celebration
  • Blog
  • Schools
    • UNC System
    • NC Community Colleges
    • PreK–12 Education
  • Features
    • Teachers Talk
    • NC Community Colleges Series
    • Nursing Education Series
    • Making Governance Work
    • Events and Webinars
    • Ed Talks
    • Rural Routes
    • Great Universities
    • Mobile Moments
    • School Voucher Series
  • Donate
  • Contact Us

BOG: Faculty pay on the agenda

November 17, 2015 by Higher Ed Works 5 Comments

CHAPEL HILL – Long-stagnant pay for university teachers and researchers will be at the top of the agenda when the University of North Carolina Board of Governors convenes Dec. 11. During a special meeting of the board last week, members spoke of their growing worry about the impact of lackluster pay and benefits for faculty… READ MORE

Filed Under: 2015, Expert Analysis, Focus on Quality, Human Capital

A&T biomaterials: “As strong as steel bolts”

November 17, 2015 by Higher Ed Works Leave a Comment

NC A&T State University Chancellor Harold Martin speaks from experience – it’s no fun carrying steel bolts inside you long after broken bones have healed. But with help from the National Science Foundation, biomaterials researchers at A&T have developed new materials to bond fractures that then degrade and disappear when their work is done. “We’ve… READ MORE

Filed Under: 2015, From Our Campuses, HBCU, North Carolina A&T

What about us?

November 10, 2015 by Higher Ed Works 4 Comments

When the Board of Governors that oversees North Carolina’s public universities granted raises recently to 12 chancellors, it prompted faculty across the system to ask:  What about us? There is no doubt that faculty – who’ve gone seven years with just one insignificant raise – are long overdue for a raise. This year University faculty… READ MORE

Filed Under: 2015, Focus on Quality, From Our Campuses, Human Capital

Arp: Smart bond plan invests in “technologies of the future”

November 10, 2015 by Higher Ed Works 1 Comment

(Click here for video of Rep. Arp discussing the bond proposal at UNC Charlotte) CHAPEL HILL – State Rep. Dean Arp (R-Union) is known as a fiscal conservative.  And his strong support for a $2 billion bond package that will go to North Carolina voters in March is rooted in sound fiscal policy. Even if… READ MORE

Filed Under: 2015, Connect NC, Economic Impact, Expert Analysis

VIDEO: Reynolds CEO Susan Cameron: No greater legacy

November 3, 2015 by Higher Ed Works Leave a Comment

To have a talented workforce for the 21st century, government, philanthropies and employers must all value higher education, Reynolds American President and CEO Susan Cameron says in the accompanying video. “There’s no greater legacy than changing lives through education,” she says. That includes making higher education available throughout a worker’s career, Cameron says – whether… READ MORE

Filed Under: 2015, Economic Impact, Focus on Quality

VIDEO: Reynolds CEO: Great faculty help students find their passion

November 3, 2015 by Higher Ed Works Leave a Comment

Great faculty are “pivotal” to higher education, Reynolds American President and CEO Susan Cameron says in the accompanying video. “Everybody can talk about one professor where the light bulb went on,” says Cameron, herself a trustee at the University of Florida. “Great faculty can help students to find their passion – and if they find… READ MORE

Filed Under: 2015, Economic Impact, Focus on Quality, Human Capital

State Leaders on Margaret Spellings

October 29, 2015 by Higher Ed Works Leave a Comment

Former Gov. Jim Hunt  Former North Carolina Gov. Jim Hunt worked with UNC President-Elect Margaret Spellings when she was an education advisor for then-Gov. George W. Bush of Texas in the late 1990s.  The two states were in a friendly competition to see which could raise test scores fastest – especially among low-income students. Hunt… READ MORE

Filed Under: 2015, Focus on Quality, Leadership, President Spellings

Too important

October 28, 2015 by Higher Ed Works 1 Comment

Yes – it was a tumultuous, divisive search with too many political overtones. But it is time to close ranks behind Margaret Spellings, whom the UNC Board of Governors has selected as the next President of the University of North Carolina System. The stakes are too high to do otherwise:  The futures of 220,000 students,… READ MORE

Filed Under: 2015, Expert Analysis, Focus on Quality, Leadership, President Spellings

Faculty Assembly Chair: Trouble at all levels with recruitment, retention

October 28, 2015 by Higher Ed Works Leave a Comment

Dr. Stephen Leonard, professor of political science at UNC Chapel Hill, is serving his second year as chair of the UNC System’s Faculty Assembly. He represents more than 16,000 professors across North Carolina’s public universities.  Leonard sat down with the Higher Education Works Foundation to talk about the importance of recruiting and retaining high-quality faculty…. READ MORE

Filed Under: 2015, Focus on Quality, From Our Campuses, Human Capital

Brilliance in our midst

October 21, 2015 by Higher Ed Works Leave a Comment

CHAPEL HILL – Aziz Sancar, the UNC-Chapel Hill scientist who just won the Nobel Prize in chemistry along with Duke scientist Paul Modrich, is paid $103,000 a year by the state. 1 And Silicon Valley venture capitalist Jim Goetz of Sequoia Capital recently told a Triangle audience that Stanford’s president isn’t looking to Harvard or… READ MORE

Filed Under: 2015, Economic Impact, Human Capital, Prosperity, UNC Chapel Hill

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 104
  • 105
  • 106
  • 107
  • 108
  • …
  • 117
  • Next Page »

Get the Latest NC Education News

Want to learn more about how Public Ed Works for North Carolina? Get timely, engaging updates sent straight to your inbox!

Filter by School or Topic

Categories

  • Economic Impact
  • Expert Analysis
  • Focus on Quality
  • From Our Campuses
  • Prosperity
  • Student Stories
  • About
  • Blog
  • Schools
  • Features
  • Donate
  • Contact Us
Powered by

Copyright © 2025 · Higher Ed Works on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in