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The Return of Yik Yak

The social media app that shut down in 2017 amid rampant bullying is back on campus with new “community guardrails” in place to prevent harassment. But some students say that’s not enough.

Enrollment Cap May Cost Berkeley 400 Students, Not 3,050

The University of California, Berkeley, has adjusted the expected number of students it would lose due to a court-ordered enrollment...

The Week in Admissions News

Study abroad in a time of war; graduate degrees don’t always pay off; legal education; State of the Union.

Berkeley Must Cap Enrollment

Following California Supreme Court’s decision, university initially said it would have to cut new enrollment by 3,050 but now says it will only lose 400 slots.
Opinion

10 Principles for Embracing Productive Conflict

The Benevolent Intention Principle, the Likability Principle and more—Todd Kashdan proposes a set of principles for higher ed institutions that aspire to promote free inquiry and protect dissent.

‘A Graphic Visual Reminder of What Has Been Lost’

Russian forces shelled and destroyed the building that housed the Hillel chapter in Kharkiv, Ukraine. The international Jewish student organization is helping students and employees fleeing the country.

University System of Georgia Censured Over Tenure Changes

The American Association of University Professors’ governing council voted unanimously over the weekend to censure the University System of Georgia...

The Promise vs. Practice of Human Rights: Academic Minute

Today on the Academic Minute, part of University of North Carolina at Asheville Week: Mark Gibney, Belk Distinguished Professor of...