Rise in "flipped classroom" model, improvements apparent
By Aditya Khurana | October 10, 2013As the use of the “flipped classroom” model rises on campus, students and faculty are taking time to adjust to the idea.
As the use of the “flipped classroom” model rises on campus, students and faculty are taking time to adjust to the idea.
Gone are the days of evaluating professors via pencil and paper—beginning this semester, course evaluations will be done online.
Community members gathered to honor the late poet Seamus Heaney with a reading of his works in Goodsen Chapel Tuesday afternoon.
A panel lead by faculty discussed their experiences in teaching courses online Friday morning.
Universities should focus on making civic engagement part of their curriculums, a leader in higher education said Thursday evening.
Edna Andrews, professor of linguistics and cultural anthropology, received the University Scholar Teacher Award
In 2009, the Pratt School of Engineering became one of the first schools to adopt the Grand Challenge Scholars Program. Soon, it plans to spread to 35 additional schools across the country.
The Duke University Libraries Annual Fund has raised an all-time high this year, tapping into a larger donor pool.
A new program promotes student and faculty interaction beyond the FLUNCH program.
The Duke Arts and Sciences Council focused on online education in their first meeting of the year Thursday.
The lecture emphasized how the inseparable association between law and dress has withstood the tests of both time and culture.
The lecture emphasized how the inseparable association between law and dress has withstood the tests of both time and culture.
What you major in may matter more than where you go to school, according to a recent study.
Duke is ranked seventh on the U.S. News and World Report's annual ranking of national universities.
The 2014 U.S. News and World Report national universities rankings will be released Tuesday.
Offered by more than 20 departments, not all seminars are created equal. Students have had mixed reactions to the mandatory class.
Although members of the political science department noted that the Great Hall will create a sense of community, individuals also expressed that the department feels far removed from the campus.
Colum McCann spoke about his novel "Let the Great World Spin"—the summer reading book for the Class of 2017—in Baldwin Auditorium Friday night.
On average, the University pays its professors $180,200 annually, the ninth most of any undergraduate university that engaged in “high research activity."
Ryan Thornburg, an associate professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, will be joining the Duke community as the visiting journalist for The Chronicle.