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Mortar Board - by Virginia N Gordon (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- Mortar Board National College Senior Honor Society has a unique place in the history of higher education and indeed in the history of the United States.
- About the Author: Author Virginia N. Gordon, PhD, was assistant dean emerita and associate professor at The Ohio State University.
- 400 Pages
- Education, Organizations & Institutions
Description
Book Synopsis
Mortar Board National College Senior Honor Society has a unique place in the history of higher education and indeed in the history of the United States. Founded in 1918, with inaugural chapters at Cornell University, University of Michigan, The Ohio State University, and Swarthmore College, Mortar Board was the first national organization to honor senior college women. Before women in the United States had the right to vote, Mortar Board members were leading their society to prominence across the country. In a real sense, Mortar Board grew up with the U.S. higher education system and grew in step with women's emergence as recognized leaders nationally. As a result, the history of Mortar Board members and their accomplishments provides readers with a unique window into women's issues on campuses during the twentieth century, the importance of college student organizations to the quality of student life, and the effect of world events on American college students. Accepting men into its ranks since 1975, Mortar Board has grown into a comprehensive national college senior honor society comprised of students who exemplify Mortar Board's founding Ideals of scholarship, leadership, and service. In preparation for its centennial, volunteers pored over fifty thousand photos, memos, and files to prepare its first-ever published history. The result is a beautifully accurate, sometimes humorous, and always enlightening portrayal of college life in the United States over the last one hundred years.
Review Quotes
This book is different from many organization histories in that it is well founded in the history of our country. The authors tie the history of Mortar Board to the events that were shaping the United States and the world. This is a story of women in academia, World War II, women's rights, civil rights, professional development, Title IX, and how these events helped guide the formation of a national collegiate honorary dedicated to promoting equal opportunities among all people and emphasizing the advancement of the status of women.
About the Author
Author Virginia N. Gordon, PhD, was assistant dean emerita and associate professor at The Ohio State University. A critical force behind the nation's growth in academic advising, Dr. Gordon wrote fifty books, monographs, book chapters, and journal articles on career counseling, advising administration, advising undecided college students, and advisor training. She was past president of the National Academic Advising Association and the founder and first director of the National Clearinghouse on Academic Advising. She was elected to Mortar Board in 1948 at The Ohio State University. She passed away on November 21, 2017.Author-editor Jane A. Hamblin, JD, CAE, COA, is the executive director of Mortar Board, Inc., and the Mortar Board National Foundation and editor in chief of the Mortar Board Forum. She has played senior student affairs roles at Purdue University and the University of Maryland-Baltimore County, and has been an instructor at Trinity University (Washington, D.C.) and Purdue. Before coming to Mortar Board in 2009, Ms. Hamblin had been a senior leader at three D.C.-based higher education associations. She was elected to Mortar Board in 1973 at Purdue University.
Contributor Susan R. Komives, EdD, internationally known scholar and observer of leadership development, is professor emerita at the University of Maryland. Executive editor of the inaugural New Directions in Student Leadership series, she has authored or edited a dozen books on leadership and student affairs. Komives is past president of the Council for the Advancement of Standards in Higher Education and the American College Personnel Association and served two colleges as vice president. She was elected to Mortar Board in 1967 by the Torchbearer chapter at Florida State University.