Posted on January 7, 2008 by Noelle McAfee
Last summer Julie Van Camp put up a list of the percentage of women tenured/tenure-track faculty in 98 U.S. doctoral programs. The range is from 50 percent at Penn State and the University of Georgia (brava!) down to six percent at the University of Florida and the University of Texas, five percent at the University [...]
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tagged: Julie van Camp, leiter report, Ph.D. granting universities, philosophy rankings, tenure, women in philosophy | 1 Comment »
Posted on January 5, 2008 by Noelle McAfee
Many people regularly visit this blog of mine to see what’s being said here about philosophy rankings, namely, the infamous Leiter report. Some say that if a philosophy Ph.D. program isn’t “Leiterrific” — if it doesn’t score well on the Leiter report — then it’s objectively not a terrific program. I beg to differ. [...]
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tagged: leiter report, methodology, philosophy rankings | 14 Comments »
Posted on November 24, 2007 by Noelle McAfee
The other day someone named Ann posted a comment to an earlier thread about philosophy rankings, including Brian Leiter’s Philosophical Gourmet Report. The upshot of her comment is that (1) she recalls a paper “statistically analysing the feedback and showing near total consensus amongst faculty from the entire range of depts assessed as to who [...]
Filed under: academic analytics, philosophical gourmet, rankings | Tagged: academic analytics, leiter report, philosophy rankings, statistics | 5 Comments »