Indiana University, Bloomington
Professor Arnove received a B.A. from the University of Michigan in 1959 (English Literature), an M.A. from Tufts University in 1961 (International Relations and Law), and a Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1969 (International Development Education). Since joining IU in 1969, he has served as the director of graduate programs in Foundations of Education, International and Comparative Education, and Education Policy Studies. He is a past President of the North American Comparative and International Education Society (2000-2001), and an Honorary Fellow of the society for lifelong contributions to scholarship in this field of study.
Professor Arnove is an expert in the fields of comparative and international education and the sociology of education. He has made major contributions to research on national education systems from a world-systems perspective, to the critical analysis of the role major philanthropic foundations play in agenda setting in education and social science research, to the historical and comparative study of national literacy campaigns, to the conceptualization of nonformal and popular education as well as alternative schools, and to the study of political and educational change in Latin America, in general, and Nicaragua, in particular.
Professor Arnove has been a visiting scholar and professor at
Stanford University, McGill University, the University of Iowa, Hangzhou
University (China), the Queensland University of Technology, the
University of Madrid (La Complutense), the University of Salamanca, the
Federal University of Bahia (on a Fulbright Lectureship), the
University of Palermo (Buenos Aires, as UNESCO Chair of Higher
Education), the Hong Kong Institute of Education, and the Iberoamerican
University in the Dominican Republic. He has received
numerous teaching and service awards from
Indiana University, including the Amoco Distinguished Teaching Award
(1982), the FACET (Faculty Colloquium on Excellence in Teaching) Award
(1991), the John W. Ryan Award for Distinguished Contributions to
International Programs and Studies (1995), and the University Graduate
School Distinguished Teaching Mentoring Award (1998). He was named a
Chancellors' Professor in 2001.