Search results for ""Author Richard Bishirjian""
St Augustine's Press The Coming Death and Future Resurrection of American Higher Education: 1885–2017
In The Coming Death and Future Resurrection of American Higher Education, Dr. Richard Bishirjian describes how, beginning in 2000, he founded Yorktown University and immediately confronted barriers designed to block entrance of his University from operating as a low cost, regionally accredited, high tech, Internet university. Dr. Richard Bishirjian’s book is a Cri de Coeur in which he passionately criticizes the higher education Establishment and laments the loss of millions of dollars of investor’s equity and twelve years of work and sacrifice. Unlike any other study of American higher education, Bishirjian tells all, names names, and exposes how the education Establishment imposes tuition costs that force parents and students into crippling debt. All is not lost, however. The experience of founding and operating a high technology university enables him to reveal this about American Higher Education: 1. How Tuition Debt is Hurting our College Students 2. Why American Higher Education operates as a Cartel 3. The Terrible Cost of Accreditation and U.S. Government Regulations 4. How “Regional Accreditation” Assures “Creative Destruction” 5. Why One Thousand Colleges may be Forced to Close by 2022 6. The Destructive Growth of Federal Control of Higher Education 7. The South’s “Legacy of Suppression” in regulating Higher Education 8. How “Smart Money” Bought Colleges and Why They left the U.S. 9. How U.S. Secretary of Education, Margaret Spellings, destroyed the Liberal Arts 10. How Robert Shireman made For-Profit Higher Education a “Class Enemy 11. How Little it Costs to create an Internet University 12. Differences between Distance and. Classroom Learning 13. Thirteen Ways to reform American Higher Education
£18.00
St Augustine's Press The Conservative Rebellion
Dr. Richard Bishirjian’s Conservative Rebellion examines the American conservative movement in light of phases of American history in which the life of the American nation took shape from forces and conditions of the American soul. The author argues that the first phase of our common political life was a rebellion that we call the “Spirit of ’76.” That rebellion attempted to preserve the practices, traditions, and customary rights of a tradition of self-government that developed during the 140 years of the Colonial era. That first “Conservative Rebellion,” erupting in Lexington and Concord, was a conservative rebellion whose spirit shapes American politics and society even today through the American conservative “movement.” The author contrasts their rebellion to the revolutionary political religion of President Woodrow Wilson. President Woodrow Wilson’s redemptive desire to destroy the “balance of power politics” of early twentieth century Europe engendered conditions that led to World War II and, ultimately, the Korean War, the war in Vietnam, and two wars by George W. Bush in Afghanistan and Iraq that the President clearly intended to be redemptive from the authoritarian practices of the Middle East. The divisions that trouble American society today were unleashed by Woodrow Wilson’s political religion and continued by Democrat and Republican Presidents alike. The Conservative Rebellion has the potential, the author believes, to replace political religion with lessons learned from the statesmanship of Americans during the Colonial and Founding eras and the mid-twentieth century revival of classical political thought. The renaissance of classical political theory by University of Notre Dame political theorists Stanley Parry, Gerhart Niemeyer, and Eric Voegelin and University of Chicago political scientist Leo Strauss is central to the conservative “rebellion” of twenty-first century American conservatives. Their knowledge that recovery of political order is necessarily based on recovery of spiritual substance and order of American society, culture, and soul is a cautionary lesson that there are no quick fixes to the crises, divisions, and failed Presidents of modern America.
£20.00