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Textbook Destroyed

McGraw-Hill Education, after being told maps in a political science textbook were anti-Israel, withdraws the volume and eliminates all copies.

Changing Course on Anti-Semitic Remarks?

Oberlin releases statements that seem to contradict its earlier position defending the right of a controversial professor, Joy Karega, to say what she wants on social media.

The Triad and For-Profits

The Obama administration prods state regulators to tighten their oversight of for-profits, with a focus on job placement rates. But confusion about calculating those rates reigns, and many state agencies are understaffed and outgunned.

Race on Stage

A new play appearing at multiple colleges tackles campus race issues at the heart of recent protests.
Opinion

The Academy in Peril?

If politicians are allowed to dictate who works in our colleges and universities, and thus whose voices get heard when we discuss the world and its inhabitants, we can't expect the results to be positive, argues William Bradley.
Opinion

Accounting for Scholarship

A recent report on the cost of publishing monographs should be of some interest to many people who buy, read and/or write scholarly books, says Scott McLemee.

Unacademic Freedom?

Academic freedom is supposed to protect unpopular views. A case involving an Oberlin professor who claimed that ISIS is really the CIA and Mossad asks whether that freedom extends to falsehoods.
Opinion

Let's Focus More on the First Year

Students enter college hoping it will be a major step up from what they were doing before, writes Roger Martin, but they are often disappointed.