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Scripps Magazine (page 2)
Marketplace Features Scripps in Discussion of Print College Magazines
Marketplace has featured Âé¶¹Çø in an article discussing why print magazines remain a “standby” for colleges looking to connect with their alum community. The piece notes that approximately half […]
Read MoreThe Common Thread
In two roundtable discussions earlier this fall, current students and alums participated in lively discussions about their academic and career journeys and the enduring connections they forged during their time at Scripps.
Read MoreWhen the Paths DivergeÂ
In this series of brief conversations, eight Scripps faculty members and students discuss the defining moments in their paths.
Read MoreA New Era for the Williamson Gallery
Erin M. Curtis, the Gabrielle Jungels-Winkler Director of the Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery, has spent her career working toward change in the world of arts institutions.
Read MoreFrom the Archives: Defining Moments
The outbreak of World War II brought changes to Âé¶¹Çø and a reckoning of what a women’s liberal arts college should be.
Read MoreScripps Magazine: The Art and Science of Empathy
By Jen A. Miller Illustrations by Saskia Keultjes Early in her research, President Suzanne Keen—a narrative empathy theorist who studies the relationships among novel reading, empathy, and altruism—became convinced that […]
Read MoreRedefining Leadership: Rosanne Rennie Holliday ’61 on Women Supporting Women
By Emily Glory Peters  In the early hours of January of 1974, Rosanne Rennie Holliday kissed her young son William goodbye, climbed into her VW Bug, and headed out with […]
Read MoreWhen Seeing Is Not Believing: Douglas Goodwin, Fletcher Jones Scholar in Computation, on the Image in the Digital Age
Douglas Goodwin has always been fascinated with how time, context, and perspective shape our conception of reality.
Read MoreData Driven: Scripps Integrates Computer Science Skills into a Liberal Arts Curriculum
In 2016,  the  National Academies of Sciences, Engineering,  and Medicine in Washington,  D.C., convened a committee of experts from government,  industry,  and academia to examine undergraduate enrollment trends. Â
Read MoreMisinformed: An interview with Associate Professor of Philosophy Yuval Avnur
In our digital age, information is more accessible to more people than ever before. Yet one of the central concerns of public life is our susceptibility to the influence of bad information, whether in the form of fake news articles, doctored images, or manipulated video. Associate Professor of Philosophy Yuval Avnur comes to this dilemma as an epistemologist, interested in how we arrive at knowledge in the first place.
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