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Timid About Fair Use?

A new report from the College Art Association says that artists and art historians have real and perceived concerns about fair use laws. Experts say other kinds of academics do, too.

Full Access

Federal judge orders Creighton medical school to provide specific accommodations -- different from those it offered -- to hearing impaired student.

Law School Hybrid

William Mitchell College of Law receives a rare approval from the American Bar Association to experiment with online education.

Hiring Themselves

Expect law schools to be reformed? Study suggests it's unlikely -- given that professors appear committed to offering tenure-track jobs to people who look and act just like they do.

Evaluating Teacher Evaluation

Report says more emphasis should be placed on designing evaluations for teacher preparation programs to better examine their quality.
Opinion

Facing Reality

The Grambling athletes' boycott is just the latest sign that it's time for historically black colleges to move to Division II, and to spend more of their limited dollars on education, not athletics, writes Aaron N. Taylor.

A Win for Public Black Colleges

Federal judge finds that system of "duplicative" academic programs at Maryland's public colleges perpetuates segregation and hurts black institutions.

Sudden Change at Howard U.

Sidney Ribeau surprises campus by announcing that he will leave presidency at end of the year.