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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 April 2021
As a university administrator, I worry about the form and substance of undergraduate education and about ways to encourage interdisciplinary perspectives on problems in a research university dominated by particular specialized disciplines. I also continue to teach a seminar in Cornell's Biology & Society Program for undergraduates and to assist others in teaching a course called Medical Humanities for second-year medical students. In the course of these administrative and teaching activities, I find myself returning to Jay Katz's Experimentation with Human Beings —both as model for teaching and as a perspective for institutional learning and change —as a model for professional action.
Jay Katz's approach to research with human subjects provides an excellent framework for analyzing the nature of teaching not simply in professional or continuing education programs in law, medicine, or social work, but in undergraduate programs as well. In my view, changing the ways in which universities help students to learn at all levels can be analyzed through the process of reflection, action, and evaluation developed in Katz's seminal work on human experimentation and most recently expounded in his suggested reforms of professional medical education in The Silent World of Doctor and Patient. For Jay Katz, the scholar who guided me to the realization that teaching and administering within the university at all levels is essentially a problem in human research, I offer this tribute.