Word: redbook
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Harvard, Rosovsky says, as General Education courses often merge with departmental offerings. Rosovsky is fond of asking audiences, "Should tap-dancing be given credit?" and answering that "we have lost the capacity to answer such questions because we have no criteria to do so." Within two years the new Redbook committee, he says, should try to reach a new consensus about what undergraduate education should be. Like its predecessor, the new committee's findings could have national significance...
Rosovsky's plan for the Redbook committee grows from the view he holds of his own job. He has two interrelated problems: preserving Harvard's academic standing and keeping it as conducive a place as possible for its professors, while holding a strict line on costs to avoid expanding a projected $1.8 million deficit. Rosovsky has responded by trying to evaluate formerly-accepted assumptions, so that educational criteria can better guide detailed budget and policy decisions...
Rosovsky told one audience not long ago that the "dean must be an inveterate optimist, or undergo severe depression." With his job now structured so that the hard choices of budgeting are balanced by the broad range of the Redbook committee, Rosovsky, despite his ambivalence, has little reason to be any less than pleased. As Harvard grads mark their 25th reunion, Rosovsky celebrates his as a member of the class of 1949 at William and Mary. Rosovsky seemed only vaguely aware of the fact last week and said he was too busy at Harvard to mark the occasion...
...last time that happened, with the University Committee on the Objectives of General Education in a Free Society, it shaped the Harvard education for 30 years. The committee produced a report known as the Redbook that led to the present Gen Ed program and course requirements, and generally changed the face of American college education...
...Redbook Committee, as it has is known, is not off the ground yet, but it has clearly become Rosovsky's pet project. He plans to work on it all summer and, with his lightened duties, next year as well. If all goes as planned, the committee's work will be what Rosovsky's deanship will be remembered for after budgetary hassles and organizational problems and new calendars are long forgotten...