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At Carnegie Mellon, Defending the Right to Tweet

She tweeted about the "chief monarch of a thieving and raping genocidal empire."

Opposing Views on the Role of Calculus

High school counselors’ views differ from those of admissions officers, who are more flexible about the mathematics courses students take.

Tentative Deal Ends Faculty Strike at Eastern Michigan

A tentative agreement has ended a faculty strike at Eastern Michigan University. Eastern Michigan faculty went on strike a week...

Why Are People Antiscience and What Can We Do About It? Academic Minute

Changing a person’s attitude on a subject can be tricky. In today’s Academic Minute, Simon Fraser University’s Aviva Philipp-Muller explains...

Who’ll Pay for Public Access to Federally Funded Research?

The White House painted an incomplete economic picture of its new policy for free, immediate access to research produced with federal grants. Will publishers adapt their business models to comply, or will scholars be on the hook?

‘U.S. News’ Changes Policy on Testing

Magazine announces that it won’t punish colleges where few students submit scores; Columbia admits to providing incorrect information for past rankings.

‘Unraveling Faculty Burnout’

Author charts her way back from severe faculty burnout in new book. While the work includes individual coping strategies, it’s also a wake-up call to institutions to stop perpetuating a culture of overwork.
Opinion

Lawyers, Guns and Autonomy

A Montana Supreme Court ruling upholding the regents’ authority to ban firearms on campuses is a victory that nevertheless reinforces the academy’s antidemocratic constitution, Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn writes.