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Former Professor Wins $1.4M Despite Charges of Undisclosed Chinese Ties

A former University of Connecticut professor won a $1.4 million settlement from UConn, Hearst Connecticut Media Group reported Monday at...

USC Professor Recalls Book After ‘L.A. Times’ Finds Plagiarism

A University of Southern California professor has recalled his new book after the Los Angeles Times found at least “95...

AAUP Censures Indiana U Northwest

The American Association of University Professors has now censured Indiana University Northwest (IUN) for firing a tenured Black professor after...

Alumni of For-Profit Online Colleges Skeptical of the Payoff

Students who earned fully online degrees from nonprofit colleges have a more favorable view of their experiences than do their...

Student Success Champion: Q&A With Brian Reed, University of Montana

As a student success administrator and former first-gen college student, Brian Reed shares his perspective on using student success data and embedding career readiness in curricula.
Opinion

How to Kill Innovation: The Florida ‘Master Plan’

Attacks on institutional autonomy, academic freedom and tenure, and diversity initiatives undermine the climate for innovation, Michael Lanford and William G. Tierney write.

Frayed Nerves, Strained Patience, Mounting Frustration

An unexplained outage at D’Youville University led to a month of network unreliability on campus. University officials say networks are now available, but faculty members say the lack of information about the outage has been frustrating.

Cohort Default Rate No More?

A nearly three-year payment pause and forthcoming changes to income-driven repayment mean that fewer student borrowers will likely default on their loans. Here’s what that means for accountability.