Misplaced Pages

Intercollegiate Studies Institute: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 23:40, 26 May 2014 editBreakfastjr3 (talk | contribs)2 editsNo edit summary← Previous edit Revision as of 04:19, 27 May 2014 edit undoAspects (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers342,944 edits Reverted to revision 609860221 by Aspects (talk): Rv unexplained edits back to last good encyclopedic version. (TW)Next edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
{{ Infobox organization
The '''Intercollegiate Studies Institute''', Inc. (or '''ISI'''), is a nonprofit educational organization founded in 1953 and headquartered in Wilmington, Delaware. ISI's motto is "Educating for Liberty," and its mission is to "inspire college students to discover, embrace, and advance the principles and virtues that make American free and prosperous."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://home.isi.org/about}}</ref> ISI supports limited government, individual liberty, personal responsibility, the rule of law, a free-market economy, and traditional values (especially in the Judeo-Chrisitan tradition).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://home.isi.org/about#principles}}</ref>
| name = Intercollegiate Studies Institute
| image = Intercollegiate Studies Institute logo.png
| image_size = 180px
| abbreviation = ISI
| motto = Educating for Liberty
| formation = 22 June 1953
| type = Nonprofit Educational Organization
| headquarters = Wilmington, Delaware
| leader_title = President
| leader_name = Christopher G. Long
| leader_title2 = Board Chairman
| leader_name2 = Alfred S. Regnery
| website = {{URL|home.isi.org}}
}}
The '''Intercollegiate Studies Institute''', Inc. (or '''ISI'''), is a non-profit educational organization founded in 1953 as the '''Intercollegiate Society of Individualists'''. Its members, over 40,000 college students and faculty in the ], use programs intended to supplement a collegiate education and provide access to resources that help achieve an education based primarily on works of influential men and women in the European and ] traditions. The group supports limited government, individual liberty, personal responsibility, the rule of law, free market economy, and traditional values (specifically, those of the Judeo-Christian tradition).<ref> Intercollegiate Studies Institute.</ref>


ISI's flagship journal, ''The Intercollegiate Review,'' is sent to students and teachers free of charge. ISI also publishes two other scholarly journals, the quarterly '']'', and the annual ''The Political Science Reviewer,'' as well as a web journal, ''First Principles.''
By educating students in the ideas behind the free market, the American founding, and Western civilization, ISI aims to educate future leaders who will shape American culture through academia, journalism, politics, business, law, and other areas. ISI uses programs intended to supplement a collegiate education and provides access to resources that help achieve an education based primarily on works of influential men and women in the European and Christian traditions. ISI reaches more than 10,000 student and faculty members in the ] through an integrated program of campus speakers, intensive conferences and seminars, student-led newspapers and clubs, fellowships and scholarships, books and magazines, and online resources.


==Core values==
Since 2011, the organization’s president has been Christopher G. Long. ISI’s founding president was ]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://home.isi.org/about}}</ref>
]
Although ISI does not have any official partisan or religious affiliation, the Institute tends towards ] and ] positions. The influence of several important twentieth-century ] thinkers is also apparent at ISI. In fact, the very reason given for the existence of ISI is that education in the modern university is insufficiently ] (in the traditional sense, i.e., ]) to meet the needs of a ].<ref> Intercollegiate Studies Institute.</ref> Further, the organization fights what it perceives as ] and ] (in the modern sense) bias among campus professors.


In a 1989 speech to the ], then-President, ], stated:
], an information service that reports on nonprofit organizations, gives ISI its Gold-level rating, demonstrating the Institute’s commitment to transparency.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.guidestar.org/organizations/23-6050131/intercollegiate-studies-institute.aspx}}</ref>
{{quote|We must...provide resources and guidance to an elite which can take up anew the task of enculturation. Through its journals, lectures, seminars, books and fellowships, this is what ISI has done successfully for 36 years. The coming of age of such elites has provided the current leadership of the conservative revival. But we should add a major new component to our strategy: the conservative movement is now mature enough to sustain a counteroffensive on that last Leftist redoubt, the college campus...We are now strong enough to establish a contemporary presence for conservatism on campus, and contest the Left on its own turf. We plan to do this by greatly expanding the ISI field effort, its network of campus-based programming.<ref>Kenneth Cribb: Heritage lectures #226, December 7, 1989.</ref>}}


== History == ==History==
In the early 1950s journalist ] called for a “fifty-year project” to revive the American ideals of individual freedom and personal responsibility “by implanting the idea in the minds of the coming generations.” To that end, in 1953 he founded ISI as the Intercollegiate Society of Individualists, with a young ] graduate, ],<ref>{{cite book|last=Peele|first=Gillian|title=Crisis of Conservatism? The Republican Party, the Conservative Movement, & American Politics After Bush|date=2011|publisher=Oxford University Press|page=29|editor=Gillian Peele, Joel D. Aberbach|chapter=American Conservatism in Historical Perspective}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://home.isi.org/about}}</ref> as president. E. Victor Milione, ISI’s next and longest-serving president, was the enterprising individual who realized Chodorov’s plan by developing publications, a membership network, a lecture and conference program, and a graduate fellowship program. In 1953, ] founded ISI as the Intercollegiate Society of Individualists, with a young ] graduate ] as president.<ref name="peele">Gillian Peele, 'American Conservatism in Historical Perspective', in ''Crisis of Conservatism? The Republican Party, the Conservative Movement, & American Politics After Bush'', Gillian Peele, Joel D. Aberbach (eds.), Oxford: ], 2011, p. 29</ref> ], ISI's next and longest-serving president, was the enterprising individual whose efforts realized Chodorov's plan through publications, a membership network, a lecture and conference program, and a graduate fellowship program.


Over the years, ISI has established itself as a leading conservative educational organization. As historian Lee Edwards observes in ''Educating for Liberty'', a history of ISI during its first fifty years (1953–2003): “ISI is today the educational pillar of the conservative movement and the leading source of information about a free society for the many students and teachers who reject the postmodernist zeitgeist.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://isibooks.org/educating-for-liberty.html}}</ref> President ] said: Over the years, ISI has established itself as a leading conservative educational organisation. In its own words, it "is today the educational pillar of the conservative movement and the leading source of information about a free society for the many students and teachers who reject the post-modernist zeitgeist."<ref name=edwards> ISI presentation of Edwards: ''Educating for Liberty.''</ref> President ] has expressed himself in the same direction:
<blockquote>By the time the Reagan Revolution marched into Washington, I had the troops I needed—thanks in no small measure to the work with American youth ISI had been doing since 1953. I am proud to count many ISI products among the workhorses of my two terms as President.</blockquote>


{{quote|By the time the Reagan Revolution marched into Washington, I had the troops I needed—thanks in no small measure to the work with American youth ISI had been doing since 1953. I am proud to count many ISI products among the workhorses of my two terms as President.|4=Ronald Reagan|5=<ref name=edwards />}}
Former Reagan administration official T. Kenneth Cribb Jr. served as president of ISI from 1989 until 2011, when current president Christopher G. Long took over.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://home.isi.org/doc/canon/Canon-sp-2011.pdf}}</ref>


Past ISI president and former Reagan administration official T. Kenneth Cribb led the institute from 1989 until 2011, when current president Christopher G. Long took over. Cribb is credited with expanding ISI's revenue from one million dollars that year to $13,636,005 in 2005.<ref> MediaTransparency.org.</ref><ref>Edwin J. Feulner: Introductory speech at ISI 50th Anniversary.</ref> ] gives ISI an overall rating of 61,51, which is in the range of "excellent." They note that 84.4% of expenses go to program expenses.<ref> Charity Navigator.</ref> In 2010, they gave ISI a 4-star rating for the 7th consecutive year, which is a result only one percent of charities accomplish.<ref> isi.org. Retrieved April 27, 2010.</ref>
==Core values==
Although ISI does not have any official partisan affiliation, the Institute embraces ] positions. One of the principal intellectual fathers of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute was ], who secured a place for the eighteenth-century Anglo-Irish statesman ] in American conservatism. Other major twentieth-century intellectual influences include ], ], ], ], ], and ]. The influence of several important twentieth-century ] thinkers is also apparent at ISI. One of the primary reasons given for the existence of ISI is that education in the modern university is insufficiently liberal (in the traditional sense, i.e.,]) to meet the needs of a classical education.


One of the principal intellectual fathers of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute was ], who secured a place for the eighteenth-century Anglo-Irish statesman ] in American conservative thought, with an emphasis on the role of prescription in political and social life, and an opposition to utopianism. The history of ISI during its first fifty years (1953–2003) is narrated by Lee Edwards in ''Educating for Liberty.''
==Leadership Development Programming==


==Programming==
===On-Campus Groups and Events===
ISI runs a number of programs organized to fight alleged ] and ] bias on collegiate campuses. First, it organizes campus conservative groups under ISI and maintains contact with the groups. Second, it holds the yearly "Polly Awards" which sheds media scrutiny on questionable campus events across the nation.<ref> Intercollegiate Studies Institute.</ref>
ISI works with thousands of students and faculty members on college campuses across the country. It organizes and mentors campus conservative groups, or “ISI Societies.” These groups are designed to offer intellectual conservative students a forum for discussion and serve as a vehicle for ISI’s campus lectures, debates, and conferences. An example of an ISI-affiliated group is], a member of the ]. Groups receive resources from ISI, including books, magazines, journals, financial grants, and mentoring.


]
ISI also hosts dozens of lectures, debates, conferences, and other events on campuses with prominent ] speakers and academics. Events discuss themes including Western civilization, political philosophy, economics, literature, technology, and more. Recent events include: a debate between ] and ] on the topic “Is There a Moral Basis for the Free Market?” at ];<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.intercollegiatereview.com/index.php/2013/10/23/is-there-a-moral-basis-for-the-free-market/}}</ref> a debate between PayPal cofounder ] and author ] on “The Prospects for Technology and Economic Growth” at ];<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRrLyckg8Nc}}</ref> a lecture by Heritage Foundation scholar Ryan T. Anderson at ] on his book ''What Is Marriage?'';<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bcheights.com/news/anderson-delivers-a-case-against-gay-marriage-1.3068483#.UkWLZbyE7Cp}}</ref> and a lecture by ] titled “] and the Good Life” at ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://home.isi.org/calendar/701d0000000pfdbAAA}}</ref>
In providing what ISI calls a "classically liberal education" to its member students, ISI runs other programs as well. It publishes a number of "Student's Guide to..." books, for example ''A Student's Guide to Liberal Learning'', providing a classical introduction into several disciplines.<ref> Intercollegiate Studies Institute.</ref> It also holds other events, such as conferences, that feature prominent ] speakers and academics, and provides funding for students to attend these conferences. In this funding capacity ISI is affiliated with the Liberty Fund.


Every spring, ISI invites applications for its ]. Open to undergraduates in all disciplines, the Honors Program offers blue-chip students the opportunity to study the roots of ] with the best and brightest faculty and students. ISI has offered over 500 Honors Program fellowships to students from across the United States since the program’s inception in 1995.
===Leadership Conferences===
ISI steers its brightest and most talented students into high-level leadership development programs. The organization hosts weekend Regional Leadership Conferences for talented undergraduates throughout the school year. In addition, each summer it hosts a number of weeklong conferences.


ISI Honors Fellows receive an invitation to a week-long all-expenses-paid summer conference, personal intellectual mentoring, a library of ISI books, and invites to weekend colloquia throughout the academic year. The 2007–2008 ISI Honors Program Summer Conferences were held in ], ] on the theme of “Law in the Western Tradition: Common, Constitutional, Natural, and Divine.”.
ISI’s most selective leadership program for undergraduates is the ], founded in 1995. Open to undergraduates in all disciplines, the Honors Program offers the best and brightest students the opportunity to study the roots of Western civilization with top professors.


In the summer of 2005, ISI Books, the imprint of ISI, published '']'', by Pennsylvania Republican Senator Rick Santorum, which premiered at #13 on the ] best sellers list. The controversial book gained the focus of state and national attention during the unsuccessful 2006 reelection campaign of Senator Santorum.
Each year, ISI selects sixty Honors Scholars from a national pool of applicants. The yearlong program begins with a weeklong summer conference. That intellectual retreat consists of lectures and small-group seminars led by ISI professors from the humanities, social sciences, and arts. The 2013–14 ISI Honors Program Summer Conference was held in ], on the theme “Rights and Duties.” The 2014–15 class of Honors Scholars will be divided into two summer conferences, one held in ] and the other in ]; those conferences will focus on “The Traditions of Liberty.”<ref>{{cite web|url=http://home.isi.org/programs/honors}}</ref>


One of ISI's stated goals is placement of conservative and libertarian student newspapers on major college campuses in America. ISI administers the ] (CN), and each year, the CN provides financial and technical assistance to a network of member publications.
Each Honors Scholar is paired with a professor, and throughout the following school year the Honors Scholars engage in an independent course of study on the free society with their faculty mentors. In addition, they participate in weekend seminars that ISI runs in partnership with ].


In the fall of 2006, ISI published the findings of its survey of the teaching of America's history and institutions in higher education. The Institute reported, as the title suggests, that there is a
===Collegiate Network Student Newspapers===
ISI’s student journalism program, the ] (CN), sponsors and mentors independent newspapers on approximately sixty college campuses.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.collegiatenetwork.org/about}}</ref> Publications in the CN include the ''Dartmouth Review'' and the ''Stanford Review''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.collegiatenetwork.org/member}}</ref> ISI provides financial and technical assistance as well as advice to student editors on layout, advertising, fund-raising, and other matters. ISI also runs training conferences where student editors learn directly from professional journalists. These weekend-long training seminars include Start the Presses, for students planning to launch new publications, and the Editors Conference, an annual event for top editors at the CN’s member publications.


==ISI Books==
ISI also grants its most talented student journalists summer internships and yearlong fellowships that give them their start in the professional media. ISI Collegiate Network fellows and interns work at publications including '']'', '']'', '']'', the '']'', '']'', '']'', and the '']''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.collegiatenetwork.org/internships}}</ref>
Intercollegiate Studies Institute operates '''ISI Books''', which publishes books on conservative issues and distributes a number of books from other publishers.<ref>{{cite news | url=http://www.isi.org/books/| title=ISI Books | publisher=Intercollegiate Studies Institute |year= 2008 | first= | last= | accessdate =2008-05-17}}</ref> The rate of publication is about 20 books per year. Focus is largely on the humanities and the foundations of Western culture and its challenge by political correctness. The Founding Fathers have been highlighted in a series of books, as have a number of modern thinkers. Publishing also includes material about ].<ref>{{cite news | url=http://www.isi.org/books/bookdetail.aspx?id=70fc5a2a-0578-42fb-9acb-1bfe708955d8 | title=Uncommon Dissent: Intellectuals Who Find Darwinism Unconvincing | publisher=ISI Books |year= 2008 | first= | last= | accessdate =2008-05-17}}</ref> ]
ISI's book club offers a selection of some 200 books.


==Fifty Worst (and Best) Books of the Century==
===Graduate Fellowships===
ISI published in 1999 a list of the fifty books that they consider the worst and the fifty that they consider the best, among the nonfiction books of the 20th century originally published in English.<ref> ''Intercollegiate Review,'' Fall 1999.</ref> ISI defined the "worst" books as those that were "widely celebrated in their day", but on reflection are "foolish, wrong-headed, or even pernicious." The list of worst books has several books in common with the list of ] published by the conservative magazine '']''.
ISI awards a number of fellowships to talented graduate students pursuing careers in higher education. ISI graduate fellows receive tuition and/or stipends, along with book allowances. The program includes four fellowships:
* '''The Richard M. Weaver Fellowship''' supports graduate students who intend to teach at the college level and are dedicated to the ideal of liberal education.
* '''The Western Civilization Fellowship''' supports advanced graduate study of the institutions, values, and history of the West.
* '''The Salvatori Fellowship''' is designed for graduate students who are exploring issues related to the American founding.
* '''The Bache Renshaw Fellowship''' goes to doctoral students in education who aim to influence the discipline with the ideas, values, and institutions that are fundamental to America’s Western tradition.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://home.isi.org/programs/fellowships}}</ref>


The top five "very worst":
==Alumni==
# ], '']'' (1928)
Alumni of ISI and its Collegiate Network student journalism program include:
# ] and ], '']'' (1935)
# ], et al., '']'' (1948)
# ], '']'' (1964)
# ], '']'' (1916)


ISI defined "best" as "volumes of extraordinary reflection and creativity in a traditional form, which heartens us with the knowledge that fine writing and clear-mindedness are perennially possible."
* ], U.S. Supreme Court justice
* ], national security advisor to President Ronald Reagan
* ], Ney Professor in American Institutions at Amherst College
* ], president of Hillsdale College
* Elizabeth Bramwell, former president of the Bramwell Growth Fund
* ], editor in chief of the ''Washington Free Beacon''
* ], bestselling author and columnist
* ], ''New York Times'' columnist
* ], founder of the Heritage Foundation
* Mike George, president of QVC
* ], McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence at Princeton University
* ], president of the National Center for Policy Analysis
* ], senior writer at the ''Weekly Standard''
* ], visiting scholar in conservative thought at the University of Colorado
* ], bestselling author and syndicated radio host
* ], ABC News senior White House correspondent
* John F. Lehman Jr., secretary of the navy under President Ronald Reagan, chairman of J. F. Lehman & Company
* ], editor of ''National Review''
* ], managing editor of ''Reason'' magazine
* ], professor of government at Harvard University
* ], president of the Federalist Society
* ], bestselling author
* ], senior editor at ''National Review''
* Joseph Rago, Pulitzer Prize–winning editorialist at the ''Wall Street Journal''
* ], U.S. Supreme Court justice
* Matthew Spalding, author and associate vice president at Hillsdale College
* Heath Tarbert, associate counsel to President George W. Bush
* ], author and critic
* ], PayPal cofounder
* ], bestselling author and ''Washington Post'' columnist
* Laura Vanderkam, author and ''USA Today'' contributor


The top five "very best":
==ISI Books and Publications==
# ], '']'' (1907)
Publications play an important role in ISI’s educational program. ISI’s flagship magazine, the ''Intercollegiate Review'', is sent to student members free of charge twice per year and is maintained as a running blog at . ISI also publishes the quarterly journal '']''.
# ], '']'' (1947)
# ], ] (1952)
# ], '']'' (1932, 1950)
# ], '']'' (1934–1961)


==See also==
The Intercollegiate Studies Institute also operates '''ISI Books''', which publishes books on the humanities, the foundations of the American republic, Western civilization, and conservative thought.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://isibooks.org/}}</ref> The Founding Fathers have been highlighted in a series of books, as have a number of modern thinkers. In providing what ISI calls a “classically liberal education” to its member students, ISI Books publishes a series called the Student Guides to the Major Disciplines. These short books, including ''A Student’s Guide to Liberal Learning'' and ''A Student’s Guide to U.S. History'', provide a classical introduction into several disciplines.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://isibooks.org/student-guides-to-the-major-disciplines.html}}</ref>
{{portal|Conservatism}}

* ]
ISI Books publishes approximately five new titles annually and offers a selection of more than two hundred books.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://isibooks.org/readers-club-subscription.html}}</ref> It also offers a discount program called the Readers Club, as well as Kindle Liberty, an e-reader loaded with fifty conservative classics.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://isibooks.org/isi-kindle-liberty.html}}</ref>
* ]
* ]
* ]


==References== ==References==
{{reflist}} {{reflist|2}}

==Literature==
* Lee Edwards: ''Educating for Liberty. The first Half-century of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute,'' Washington, DC 2003, Regnery Publishing. ISBN 0-89526-093-X


==External links== ==External links==
* http://home.isi.org *
*
*
*
* at the Hoover Institution Archives contains several oral histories about the ISI.

===Criticism===
* Digitas. March 1996.


] ]

Revision as of 04:19, 27 May 2014

Intercollegiate Studies Institute
AbbreviationISI
Formation22 June 1953
TypeNonprofit Educational Organization
HeadquartersWilmington, Delaware
PresidentChristopher G. Long
Board ChairmanAlfred S. Regnery
Websitehome.isi.org

The Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Inc. (or ISI), is a non-profit educational organization founded in 1953 as the Intercollegiate Society of Individualists. Its members, over 40,000 college students and faculty in the United States, use programs intended to supplement a collegiate education and provide access to resources that help achieve an education based primarily on works of influential men and women in the European and Christian traditions. The group supports limited government, individual liberty, personal responsibility, the rule of law, free market economy, and traditional values (specifically, those of the Judeo-Christian tradition).

ISI's flagship journal, The Intercollegiate Review, is sent to students and teachers free of charge. ISI also publishes two other scholarly journals, the quarterly Modern Age, and the annual The Political Science Reviewer, as well as a web journal, First Principles.

Core values

Personification of Faculty of Arts. A liberal education aims at granting an understanding of human nature and perennial values – concepts the ISI claims are questioned in modern curricula.

Although ISI does not have any official partisan or religious affiliation, the Institute tends towards paleoconservative and traditionalist conservative positions. The influence of several important twentieth-century Roman Catholic thinkers is also apparent at ISI. In fact, the very reason given for the existence of ISI is that education in the modern university is insufficiently liberal (in the traditional sense, i.e., classical liberalism) to meet the needs of a classical education. Further, the organization fights what it perceives as political correctness and liberal (in the modern sense) bias among campus professors.

In a 1989 speech to the Heritage Foundation, then-President, T. Kenneth Cribb Jr., stated:

We must...provide resources and guidance to an elite which can take up anew the task of enculturation. Through its journals, lectures, seminars, books and fellowships, this is what ISI has done successfully for 36 years. The coming of age of such elites has provided the current leadership of the conservative revival. But we should add a major new component to our strategy: the conservative movement is now mature enough to sustain a counteroffensive on that last Leftist redoubt, the college campus...We are now strong enough to establish a contemporary presence for conservatism on campus, and contest the Left on its own turf. We plan to do this by greatly expanding the ISI field effort, its network of campus-based programming.

History

In 1953, Frank Chodorov founded ISI as the Intercollegiate Society of Individualists, with a young Yale University graduate William F. Buckley, Jr. as president. E. Victor Milione, ISI's next and longest-serving president, was the enterprising individual whose efforts realized Chodorov's plan through publications, a membership network, a lecture and conference program, and a graduate fellowship program.

Over the years, ISI has established itself as a leading conservative educational organisation. In its own words, it "is today the educational pillar of the conservative movement and the leading source of information about a free society for the many students and teachers who reject the post-modernist zeitgeist." President Reagan has expressed himself in the same direction:

By the time the Reagan Revolution marched into Washington, I had the troops I needed—thanks in no small measure to the work with American youth ISI had been doing since 1953. I am proud to count many ISI products among the workhorses of my two terms as President.

— , in Ronald Reagan

Past ISI president and former Reagan administration official T. Kenneth Cribb led the institute from 1989 until 2011, when current president Christopher G. Long took over. Cribb is credited with expanding ISI's revenue from one million dollars that year to $13,636,005 in 2005. Charity Navigator gives ISI an overall rating of 61,51, which is in the range of "excellent." They note that 84.4% of expenses go to program expenses. In 2010, they gave ISI a 4-star rating for the 7th consecutive year, which is a result only one percent of charities accomplish.

One of the principal intellectual fathers of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute was Russell Kirk, who secured a place for the eighteenth-century Anglo-Irish statesman Edmund Burke in American conservative thought, with an emphasis on the role of prescription in political and social life, and an opposition to utopianism. The history of ISI during its first fifty years (1953–2003) is narrated by Lee Edwards in Educating for Liberty.

Programming

ISI runs a number of programs organized to fight alleged political correctness and liberal bias on collegiate campuses. First, it organizes campus conservative groups under ISI and maintains contact with the groups. Second, it holds the yearly "Polly Awards" which sheds media scrutiny on questionable campus events across the nation.

File:Intercollegiate Studies Institute Student's Guide Multi-volume set.jpg
ISI introduces the major disciplines through a series of Student's Guides.

In providing what ISI calls a "classically liberal education" to its member students, ISI runs other programs as well. It publishes a number of "Student's Guide to..." books, for example A Student's Guide to Liberal Learning, providing a classical introduction into several disciplines. It also holds other events, such as conferences, that feature prominent conservative speakers and academics, and provides funding for students to attend these conferences. In this funding capacity ISI is affiliated with the Liberty Fund.

Every spring, ISI invites applications for its Honors Program. Open to undergraduates in all disciplines, the Honors Program offers blue-chip students the opportunity to study the roots of Western Civilization with the best and brightest faculty and students. ISI has offered over 500 Honors Program fellowships to students from across the United States since the program’s inception in 1995.

ISI Honors Fellows receive an invitation to a week-long all-expenses-paid summer conference, personal intellectual mentoring, a library of ISI books, and invites to weekend colloquia throughout the academic year. The 2007–2008 ISI Honors Program Summer Conferences were held in Québec City, Canada on the theme of “Law in the Western Tradition: Common, Constitutional, Natural, and Divine.”.

In the summer of 2005, ISI Books, the imprint of ISI, published It Takes a Family: Conservatism and the Common Good, by Pennsylvania Republican Senator Rick Santorum, which premiered at #13 on the New York Times best sellers list. The controversial book gained the focus of state and national attention during the unsuccessful 2006 reelection campaign of Senator Santorum.

One of ISI's stated goals is placement of conservative and libertarian student newspapers on major college campuses in America. ISI administers the Collegiate Network (CN), and each year, the CN provides financial and technical assistance to a network of member publications.

In the fall of 2006, ISI published the findings of its survey of the teaching of America's history and institutions in higher education. The Institute reported, as the title suggests, that there is a "coming crisis in citizenship."

ISI Books

Intercollegiate Studies Institute operates ISI Books, which publishes books on conservative issues and distributes a number of books from other publishers. The rate of publication is about 20 books per year. Focus is largely on the humanities and the foundations of Western culture and its challenge by political correctness. The Founding Fathers have been highlighted in a series of books, as have a number of modern thinkers. Publishing also includes material about intelligent design.

File:Intercollegiate Studies Institute readers club.gif
ISI Books Readers Club logo

ISI's book club offers a selection of some 200 books.

Fifty Worst (and Best) Books of the Century

ISI published in 1999 a list of the fifty books that they consider the worst and the fifty that they consider the best, among the nonfiction books of the 20th century originally published in English. ISI defined the "worst" books as those that were "widely celebrated in their day", but on reflection are "foolish, wrong-headed, or even pernicious." The list of worst books has several books in common with the list of harmful books published by the conservative magazine Human Events.

The top five "very worst":

  1. Margaret Mead, Coming of Age in Samoa (1928)
  2. Beatrice and Sidney Webb, Soviet Communism: A New Civilization? (1935)
  3. Alfred Kinsey, et al., Sexual Behavior in the Human Male (1948)
  4. Herbert Marcuse, One-Dimensional Man (1964)
  5. John Dewey, Democracy and Education (1916)

ISI defined "best" as "volumes of extraordinary reflection and creativity in a traditional form, which heartens us with the knowledge that fine writing and clear-mindedness are perennially possible."

The top five "very best":

  1. Henry Adams, The Education of Henry Adams (1907)
  2. C. S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man (1947)
  3. Whittaker Chambers, Witness (1952)
  4. T. S. Eliot, Selected Essays, 1917–1932 (1932, 1950)
  5. Arnold J. Toynbee, A Study of History (1934–1961)

See also

References

  1. The Principles of a Free Society Intercollegiate Studies Institute.
  2. Mission Intercollegiate Studies Institute.
  3. Kenneth Cribb: Conservatism and the American Academy: Prospects for the 1990 's Heritage lectures #226, December 7, 1989.
  4. Gillian Peele, 'American Conservatism in Historical Perspective', in Crisis of Conservatism? The Republican Party, the Conservative Movement, & American Politics After Bush, Gillian Peele, Joel D. Aberbach (eds.), Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011, p. 29
  5. ^ What They're Saying... ISI presentation of Edwards: Educating for Liberty.
  6. Intercollegiate Institute, Inc. MediaTransparency.org.
  7. Edwin J. Feulner: Introduction to T. Kenneth Cribb, Jr. Introductory speech at ISI 50th Anniversary.
  8. Intercollegiate Studies Institute Charity Navigator.
  9. Charity Navigator Awards ISI Its Seventh Consecutive 4-Star Rating isi.org. Retrieved April 27, 2010.
  10. Campus outrage awards Intercollegiate Studies Institute.
  11. Student's Guide to the major disciplines Intercollegiate Studies Institute.
  12. "ISI Books". Intercollegiate Studies Institute. 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-17.
  13. "Uncommon Dissent: Intellectuals Who Find Darwinism Unconvincing". ISI Books. 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-17.
  14. The Fifty Worst (and Best) Books of the Century Intercollegiate Review, Fall 1999.

Literature

  • Lee Edwards: Educating for Liberty. The first Half-century of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Washington, DC 2003, Regnery Publishing. ISBN 0-89526-093-X

External links

Criticism

Categories: