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GEOGRAPHY AND ENTERPRISE IN HIGHER EDUCATIONGordon Clark (Editor)A conference held at Lancaster University
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Click the author's name to view the abstract for a specific chapter
| Acknowledgements | |
| Abstracts of Chapters | |
| Chapter 1 | Geography and the Enterprise in Higher Education initiative: problems and potential.
Gordon Clark |
| Chapter 2 | The management of EHE projects.
John McClatchey |
| Chapter 3 | Enterprise and academic objectives in Geography.
Clive S. Morphet |
| Chapter 4 | Implementing and integrating EHE: the experience of the Department of Environmental and Geographical Studies, Manchester Polytechnic.
David B. Hardman |
| Chapter 5 | Integrating Enterprise into the Geography curriculum: the Salford experience since 1987.
Colin Harrison and Brian P. Hindle |
| Chapter 6 | Geography and Enterprise: the experience of a College of Higher Education.
James W.A. Price and Hugh D. Cutler |
| Chapter 7 | Teaching without lectures: the case of a final-year course in industrial geography.
Michael J. Healey |
| Chapter 8 | Assessing a group-based enterprise project.
Roy W. Alexander |
| Chapter 9 | Student-based collaborative research initiatives with a Family Health Services Authority.
Linda Stanier |
| Chapter 10 | EHE at Polytechnic South West: the geography programme of transferable skills and 'business' placements.
Brian Chalkley |
| Chapter 11 | Industrial placements in a Geography degree: a 'fast track' 71 method.
Ian R. Couch |
| Chapter 12 | What Do Geographers Do? Careers and Enterprise.
John McClatchey, Tessa Cubitt and Adrian Passmore |