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Kamala Harris, wearing a pink suit, smiles and shakes hands at this year's Alpha Kappa Alpha Boulé.

Black Sororities, Fraternities ‘Organizing Like Never Before’

The organizations are mobilizing to get voters to the polls as their student and alumni members embrace Alpha Kappa Alpha member Kamala Harris’s presidential campaign.

A humanoid robot with the letters AI on its chest is caught in a spotlight as pieces of paper fly around

Students and Professors Believe AI Will Aid Cheating

A new survey finds students believe it’s already easier to cheat, thanks to generative artificial intelligence—and instructors think it will get worse in coming years.

A calendar with the 15th of the month circled in red pen. A red pen lies atop the calendar.

Why Aren’t College Grads ‘Job-Ready’?

Patrick J. Casey argues that the reluctance to enforce deadlines and other workplace norms is not serving students well.

A room full of high-top tables at the 2022 Health Professions Expo at Seton Hall

Program Innovation: Pre-Career Expo Huddle Gets Students Connection-Ready

Seton Hall’s Pre-Professional Advising Center teaches students the whys and how-tos of networking prior to its annual Health Professions Expo, providing assistance in maximizing event participation and outcomes.

The book cover for “Lifting the Veil on Enrollment Management: How a Powerful Industry is Limiting Social Mobility in American Higher Education,” edited by Stephen J. Burd.
Opinion

Yes, the Enrollment Management Industry Is Harming Higher Ed

Financial aid leveraging leaves low-income students and their families with heavy debt loads, Stephen J. Burd writes.

Students walk to class at Rice University on Aug. 29, 2022, in Houston.

Funding Student Success: Boosting Undergrad Teaching Grants

Rice University promotes innovation among undergraduate faculty through a $60,000 annual grant.

Shawntal Z. Brown is pictured wearing an orange blazer next to an image of UT Austin's campus, overlaid with text from SB 17 and a picture of Texas's outline.

‘Heartbreaking to Be Collateral’ in the Battle Over DEI

Shawntal Z. Brown worked for UT Austin for seven years before she was laid off in April, along with dozens of colleagues. The move shocked her—and changed her views on working in higher education.

Books in a digital space

Taylor & Francis AI Deal Sets ‘Worrying Precedent’ for Academic Publishing

The publisher didn’t give authors any notice before selling access to its data to Microsoft for $10 million. The agreement could improve academic research, but it further entrenches the predatory nature of academic publishing, experts say.