"This book pushes past our typically vague thoughts about trust in education to explain why genuine trust across people who see the world differently is so hard to achieve and so important to strive for. Essential reading."
— Michael S. McPherson, coauthor of 'Lesson Plan: An Agenda for Change in American Higher Education'
“Amid the growing skepticism of legislators, students, and citizens toward colleges and universities, there is no topic that is more timely or urgent than how to rebuild trust in higher education. Networks of Trust makes a critical contribution by showing us the importance of earning and sustaining that trust within our classrooms and our institutions.”
— Jennifer M. Morton, author of 'Moving Up without Losing Your Way: The Ethical Costs of Upward Mobility'
"In this timely, post-COVID book, professor Laden addresses the experience of college students whose upbringing did not prepare them for higher education’s traditional approach to knowledge acquisition. His idea that faculty and administrators must recognize the information trust networks that students bring with them to college opens a fascinating discussion about how to support student learning by building trust through a culture of open-mindedness, care, and charitable thinking."
— Susan Poser, Hofstra University