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Sweeping changes in work and academe are threatening placement centers with irrelevancy. The rise of entrepreneurial firms, the prevalence of career change, the shifting structure of knowledge, and the changing student body demographics demand a creative response. Present proposals for change, however, ignore basic questions and instead focus on technology, programs, and publicity. This book presents a new approach, a nine-part paradigm aimed at creating a more entrepreneurial, proactive, empowering, multidisciplinary future. Freeman presents specific ideas for invigorating old programs and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Sweeping changes in work and academe are threatening placement centers with irrelevancy. The rise of entrepreneurial firms, the prevalence of career change, the shifting structure of knowledge, and the changing student body demographics demand a creative response. Present proposals for change, however, ignore basic questions and instead focus on technology, programs, and publicity. This book presents a new approach, a nine-part paradigm aimed at creating a more entrepreneurial, proactive, empowering, multidisciplinary future. Freeman presents specific ideas for invigorating old programs and creating dynamic new ones, offers a redefinition of the external relationships, applies process reengineering to strategy, and presents a vision of placement centers linked with learning. Devoted to serving students, Freeman brings a humanistic perspective along with models from state-of-the-art business practice to a new vision for college placement centers.
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Autorenporträt
JOEY FREEMAN is Associate Director for Student Affairs at the Atlanta, Georgia campus of National-Louis University. Previously, he was the Student Affairs Advisor at the University of Georgia Career Planning and Placement Center, where he presented seminars on over 40 topics. He holds three master's degrees, is the author of two books and an article featured in The National Business Employment Weekly, and has taught career planning and management in India. He serves as president of his own consulting and publishing firm, Strategic Career Management, in Athens, Georgia.