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Opinion
Maintaining Inclusion in Engineering in a Post-Dobbs World
The U.S. Supreme Court ruling and state laws will adversely impact marginalized groups in engineering and STEM, so we must rethink recruitment and retention, write Marjolein C. H. van der Meulen, Jennifer S. Wayne, Naomi C. Chesler and Lori A. Setton.
New Guide for Accreditors Assessing Colleges in Prisons
A new guidebook, released Thursday, aims to help accreditors, and administrators and professors involved in the accreditation process, to better...
Oxnard College President Retires Amid Ongoing Investigation
Oxnard College president Luis Sanchez plans to retire at the end of January as a months-long investigation into sexual harassment...
Education Department to Scrutinize College Banking Agreements
The U.S. Department of Education is stepping up its enforcement of college-sponsored banking arrangements. In conjunction with a new report...
Opinion
Entangled and Enchanted
Scott McLemee reviews Kay Harel’s Darwin’s Love of Life: A Singular Case of Biophilia.
Penn State to Host Proud Boys Founder
A conservative Pennsylvania State University student group will host Gavin McInnes, founder of the far-right group the Proud Boys, for...
Stanford Admits to Anti-Jewish Admissions Bias in ’50s
Stanford University president Marc Tessier-Lavigne admitted Wednesday that the university discriminated against Jewish applicants in the 1950s, and he apologized...
Raj Chetty on Inequalities in the U.S.
Students born to the wealthiest families have a nearly 100 percent likelihood of going to college. Those born to the poorest families have about a 30 percent chance.
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