Castagnera on Risk Management in Higher Education… and more

Pages

  • Home
  • Personal Site
  • Ned McAdoo

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Knowledge has its price

International students
International students (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
International students ask if the US is a safe place to study:

http://chronicle.com/article/International-Students-Ask-Is/138755/?cid=at&utm_source=at&utm_medium=en



Related articles

  • International Students receiving concession!
  • Irish Govt provides scholarships to students from emerging markets
  • Scholarships available for International Students in Australia
  • International Students Ask: Is It Safe to Study in the U.S.?
  • Job Search Strategies For International Students
Enhanced by Zemanta
Posted by Jim Castagnera at 7:45 AM
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

No comments:

Post a Comment

Newer Post Older Post Home
Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Followers

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (1048)
    • ►  October (67)
    • ►  September (56)
    • ►  August (81)
    • ►  July (96)
    • ►  June (141)
    • ►  May (104)
    • ►  April (91)
    • ►  March (141)
    • ►  February (115)
    • ►  January (156)
  • ▼  2013 (1392)
    • ►  December (161)
    • ►  November (131)
    • ►  October (141)
    • ►  September (119)
    • ►  August (120)
    • ►  July (98)
    • ►  June (148)
    • ►  May (109)
    • ▼  April (69)
      • The Generation Gasp: April 27, 2013
      • SCOTUS will decide whether "but for" or "mixed mot...
      • So what's wrong with being a plumber, an electrici...
      • Law schools are working to reorient themselves
      • Montana State faculty decertify their union
      • Chi-town fast-food workers on strike
      • Conspiracy theories abound in wake of Boston bombing
      • DHS Secretary's Testimony on Proposed Immigration Act
      • DHS Inspector General's Report here
      • Fellow vets: beware of possible Internet scam
      • Knowledge has its price
      • Typical Paul Rand: Looking at the wrong tree in th...
      • New issue of Council on US-Arab Relations Chronicl...
      • Francesco Sisci explains how China can become the ...
      • Two Arrested on Terrorism Charges in Canada: Canad...
      • Surviving Bomber Faces the Death Penalty
      • The Boston Bomber: Do the police have a "MIranda" ...
      • Professor Ely Karmon on the background of the Bost...
      • The Generation Gasp: April 20, 2013
      • The Boston bombers: one down and one to go
      • Museum of Anthropology (Photo credit: masabu) N...
      • Study suggests criminal background checks of appli...
      • Shumer-McCain: More of the Same?
      • Gun control failed in the Senate Thanks to Callous...
      • US Customs and Boarder Protection's 2014 Budget Re...
      • My Review of "Zero Dark Thirty"
      • Student loan debt growing fastest among seniors......
      • DOE is taking another swing at its "gainful employ...
      • Delaware should keep its death penalty
      • Make the War on Terror pay off
      • Sauce for the Goose...
      • The Generation Gasp
      • Dan Bloom sez Roger's Star was purchased for him
      • An ugly threat to scholarly discourse on the Internet
      • Testimony: Impact of Sequestration on Homeland Sec...
      • Anyone who doesn't understand the GOP agenda deser...
      • Law Makers and Advocates Are at Odds Over How to D...
      • Rally for gun control...
      • Endorse gun control here:
      • Has the Supreme Court confused the standard for br...
      • Can a restaurant require a waitress, who has had b...
      • MOOCs and Intellectual Property Rights
      • New survey sez employers still want broadly educat...
      • Adjuncts and Unions: an Update Compliments of the ...
      • Rutgers to retain an outside investigator
      • The Generation Gasp: April 6, 2013
      • "Some Pooches Can't Be Screwed."
      • The StingRay: latest issue in the ongoing tug of w...
      • AAUP releases 2012 faculty pay data
      • FBI asking why Rutgers Roundball Whistleblower all...
      • Italy's experience with Internet policy is seen as...
      • Lord knows there are too many of us already
      • WIsh I had thought of this title for my new book o...
      • Rutgers Roundball Scandal Has Reached the AD
      • Did you ever wonder what the judge has on under hi...
      • Prof is in trouble over rhetorical question on his...
      • Study argues universities benefit from faculty unions
      • Craigslist Killer draws the death penalty in Ohio
      • Rutger's ROundball Controversy may reach to presid...
      • Getting airtime on ESPN doesn't always pay
      • A new decision out of federal court in Manhattan o...
      • A new book on drones and targeted killing by an au...
      • And the beat goes on...
      • A College with No Faculty?
      • Prof crafts his own "Climate Survey"
      • Israeli security concerns and the Balkans
      • National Council on U.S. - Arab Relations offers V...
      • Dershowitz sez gay rights are unstoppable
      • Like to talk dirty? Beware of who may be listening...
    • ►  March (55)
    • ►  February (98)
    • ►  January (143)
  • ►  2012 (1894)
    • ►  December (103)
    • ►  November (118)
    • ►  October (106)
    • ►  September (120)
    • ►  August (196)
    • ►  July (205)
    • ►  June (300)
    • ►  May (242)
    • ►  April (156)
    • ►  March (95)
    • ►  February (117)
    • ►  January (136)
  • ►  2011 (2129)
    • ►  December (149)
    • ►  November (181)
    • ►  October (164)
    • ►  September (181)
    • ►  August (166)
    • ►  July (193)
    • ►  June (215)
    • ►  May (209)
    • ►  April (201)
    • ►  March (188)
    • ►  February (146)
    • ►  January (136)
  • ►  2010 (151)
    • ►  December (78)
    • ►  November (16)
    • ►  October (16)
    • ►  September (21)
    • ►  August (16)
    • ►  July (4)

JOC: Journalist, Lawyer, Teacher

My photo
Jim Castagnera
- Public Information Officer, U.S. Coast Guard (1970-1973) - Communication Director, Case Western Reserve University (1974-1978) - Assistant Professor, Business Law, UT-Austin (1981-1983) - Labor Lawyer and Member, IP Practice Group, Saul Ewing (Philadelphia, PA) (1984-1993) - Professor of Legal Methods, Widener Law School (1993-1996) - Currently university legal counsel and Managing Director of K&C HR Enterprises - 18 published books, including "Al Qaeda Goes to College" (Praeger 2009); "Handbook for Student Law" (Peter Lang 2010, Revised Ed. 2014); "Attorney at Large" (Amazon 2011); "Counter Terrorism Issues" (CRC Press 2013) - 2007 Academic Fellow on Terrorism, Foundation for Defense of Democracies (Israel) - Associate Editor, Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy -Member, FBI Infragard Newark Chapter -Member, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences -Member, Association of Corporate Counsel - Member, NJ Association of Criminal Justice Educators
View my complete profile
Simple theme. Powered by Blogger.