HomePublications Series on Engaged Learning and Teaching Share: Section NavigationSkip section navigationIn this sectionSeries on Engaged Learning and Teaching Forthcoming Books Proposal Guidelines Author Guide A Long View of Undergraduate Research by Kristine Johnson and J. Michael Rifenburg Learning on Location by Ashley J. Holmes Key Practices for Fostering Engaged Learning by Jessie L. Moore Cultivating Capstones Edited by Caroline J. Ketcham, Anthony G. Weaver, and Jessie L. Moore The Faculty Factor Edited by Jennifer E. Eidum and Lara Lomicka Promoting Equity and Justice through Pedagogical Partnership by Alise de Bie, Elizabeth Marquis, Alison Cook-Sather, and Leslie Patricia Luqueño Mind the Gap Edited by Nina Namaste, Amanda Sturgill, Neal W. Sobania, and Michael Vande Berg About the Series Use discount code EFLY01 for 20% off all books in the series on the Routledge website! Series Editors: Jessie L. Moore (jmoore28@elon.edu), Director, Center for Engaged Learning, Elon University Peter Felten (pfelten@elon.edu), Executive Director, Center for Engaged Learning, Elon University Primary Contact: Center for Engaged Learning Managing Editor, cel-publishing@elon.edu The Routledge/Center for Engaged Learning Series on Engaged Learning and Teaching features concise books (both single author and edited collections) for a multi-disciplinary, higher education audience interested in research-informed engaged learning practices. Series books are published by Routledge (originally by Stylus Publishing, which was acquired by Routledge) and supplemented by open-access resources hosted on the Center for Engaged Learning’s website. Book authors/editors who publish in the series will join a community of scholars focused on engaged learning and teaching, with series books collectively marketed to faculty, staff, and administrators across higher education institution types. The Series Editors collaborate with book authors/editors on promoting their books to a broad audience of stakeholders in higher education, offer strategies for showcasing books in conference presentations, and support the development of robust supplemental resources that extend readers’ use and discussion of the books. Series Audience Although individual books in the series might most appeal to those interested in a specific topic, authors/editors should “translate” their research/theories for broad audiences in higher education, including faculty, staff, faculty developers, administrators, and policy makers. Therefore, authors/editors should speak to the scholarship’s implications for higher education, including effective practices for teaching, curriculum design, and/or educational policies.