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Biological evolution is a fact-but the many conflicting theories of evolution remain controversial even today. When Adaptation and Natural Selection was first published in 1966, it struck a powerful blow against those who argued for the concept of group selection-the idea that evolution acts to select entire species rather than individuals. Williams's famous work in favor of simple Darwinism over group selection has become a classic of science literature, valued for its thorough and convincing argument and its relevance to many fields outside of biology. Now with a new foreword by Richard Dawkins, Adaptation and Natural Selection is an essential text for understanding the nature of scientific debate.
Adaptation (Biology) --- Natural selection. --- SCIENCE / Life Sciences / Evolution. --- Darwinism --- Selection, Natural --- Genetics --- Variation (Biology) --- Biological invasions --- Evolution (Biology) --- Heredity --- Environment --- Biology --- Self-organizing systems --- Biological fitness --- Environmental adaptation --- Adaptation, Environmental --- Adaptation and Natural Selection. --- Adaptation. --- Adaptive radiation. --- Allele. --- Amphibian. --- Analogy. --- Aposematism. --- Autotroph. --- Bacteria. --- Behavior. --- Biologist. --- Biology. --- Bird. --- Charles Darwin. --- Competition. --- Courtship. --- Darwinism. --- Dominance hierarchy. --- Earthworm. --- Ecology. --- Effectiveness. --- Enzyme. --- Eusociality. --- Evolution of sexual reproduction. --- Evolution. --- Evolutionary developmental biology. --- Evolutionary progress. --- Explanation. --- Fecundity. --- Female. --- Fertilisation. --- Fitness (biology). --- Functional organization. --- Gamete. --- Gene pool. --- Gene. --- Genetic diversity. --- Genetic recombination. --- Genotype. --- Germ cell. --- Germ plasm. --- Group selection. --- Heredity. --- Hybrid (biology). --- In Specie. --- Inclusive fitness. --- Indication (medicine). --- Insect. --- Invertebrate. --- Larva. --- Mammal. --- Mammalian reproduction. --- Mating. --- Meiosis. --- Mendelian inheritance. --- Morphogenesis. --- Mortality rate. --- Mutation rate. --- Mutation. --- Niles Eldredge. --- Nutrition. --- Obligate. --- Occam's razor. --- Offspring. --- Organism. --- Parthenogenesis. --- Phenotype. --- Physiology. --- Population density. --- Population genetics. --- Population size. --- Predation. --- Probability. --- Protein. --- Protist. --- Reader (academic rank). --- Reproduction. --- Reproductive success. --- Requirement. --- Selection coefficient. --- Senescence. --- Sex ratio. --- Sex. --- Sexual conflict. --- Sexual reproduction. --- Shoaling and schooling. --- Social animal. --- Student (magazine). --- Suggestion. --- Taxonomy (biology). --- Teleonomy. --- Territory (animal). --- The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection. --- Ungulate. --- University of California, Berkeley. --- Vertebrate. --- Viviparity. --- Woodpecker. --- Zygote.
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American higher education faces some serious problems-but they are not the ones most people think. In this brief and accessible book, two leading experts show that many so-called crises-from the idea that typical students are drowning in debt to the belief that tuition increases are being driven by administrative bloat-are exaggerated or simply false. At the same time, many real problems-from the high dropout rate to inefficient faculty staffing-have received far too little attention. In response, William G. Bowen and Michael S. McPherson provide a frank assessment of the biggest challenges confronting higher education and propose a bold agenda for reengineering essential elements of the system to meet them. The result promises to help shape the debate about higher education for years to come.Lesson Plan shows that, for all of its accomplishments, higher education today is falling short when it comes to vital national needs. Too many undergraduates are dropping out or taking too long to graduate; minorities and the poor fare worse than their peers, reinforcing inequality; and college is unaffordable for too many. But these problems could be greatly reduced by making significant changes, including targeting federal and state funding more efficiently; allocating less money for "merit aid" and more to match financial need; creating a respected "teaching corps" that would include nontenure faculty; improving basic courses in fields such as math by combining adaptive learning and face-to-face teaching; strengthening leadership; and encouraging more risk taking.It won't be easy for faculty, administrators, trustees, and legislators to make such sweeping changes, but only by doing so will they make it possible for our colleges and universities to meet the nation's demands tomorrow and into the future.
Education, Higher --- Education, Higher --- Aims and objectives. --- ADAPT. --- Academic degree. --- Academic tenure. --- Adaptive learning. --- Adjunct professor. --- Advanced Training. --- Affirmative action. --- Agenda for Change. --- Attendance. --- Bachelor's degree. --- Career. --- Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education. --- Classroom. --- Claudia Goldin. --- College Board. --- Community college. --- Cooper Union. --- Cost reduction. --- Coursera. --- Credential. --- Critical infrastructure. --- Critical thinking. --- David Autor. --- Debt. --- Disadvantage. --- Dividend. --- Doctor of Philosophy. --- Economic inequality. --- Economics. --- Economist. --- Education in Virginia. --- Education. --- Educational attainment. --- Educational institution. --- Effectiveness. --- Emerging technologies. --- Expense. --- Faculty (academic staff). --- Faculty (division). --- For-profit higher education in the United States. --- Funding. --- Graduate school. --- Higher education. --- Human capital. --- Impose. --- Income distribution. --- Income. --- Inside Higher Ed. --- Institute of Education Sciences. --- Institution. --- Kevin Carey. --- Lawrence F. Katz. --- Lawrence S. Bacow. --- Learning. --- Liberal education. --- Lumina Foundation. --- Macalester College. --- Mindset. --- National Bureau of Economic Research. --- National Center for Education Statistics. --- Obstacle. --- Of Education. --- Opportunity cost. --- Payment. --- Pell Grant. --- Pricing. --- Private school. --- Private university. --- Professional certification. --- Public institution (United States). --- Public university. --- Quartile. --- Rate of return. --- Reader (academic rank). --- Rebecca Blank. --- Retention Bonus. --- Richard Kahlenberg. --- SAT. --- Sarah E. Turner. --- Scholarship. --- Secondary school. --- Skill. --- Social mobility. --- Socioeconomic status. --- Student debt. --- Student loan. --- Student number. --- Student. --- Subsidy. --- Sweet Briar College. --- Tax. --- Teaching method. --- Technology. --- Trade-off. --- Tuition payments. --- Undergraduate education. --- University System of Maryland. --- University. --- William G. Bowen. --- Year.
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