Fantastic resource! This is, by far, my favorite of my recent reads on intellectualism, the university, and educational philosophy. I am tempted to say, "I wish I'd read this when I was starting college," but I think the beginning of grad school might be the perfect place to first encounter it. In this volume, Pelikan uses Newman's Idea of the University as a structure for his own reflection on the topic of the university. He brings excellent critiques of Newman, as well as relevant connections of 19th-century Newman to the state of education in the late-20th-into-21st-centuries.
While Pelikan dives heavily into the philosophical background of the university, he also makes frequent connections to the practical outworking of those ideas. He often does this by considering the relationship between undergraduate, graduate, and professorial work, which all happen simultaneously in the university. Success and health in each of these categories, he will argue, is closely tied to the relationship between teaching and research, as well as one's moral and philosophical understanding of a university. Too often an incredibly thoughtful book then falters by offering trite practical solutions, or vice versa. Pelikan has avoided this fault! As I begin graduate studies, I will be taking many of these practical tips and ideas with me.
It is a great resource, as well as a fitting tribute to Newman.