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Academic Minute: How Food Transforms Neighborhoods

Today on the Academic Minute: Pascale Joassart-Marcelli, professor of geography at San Diego State University, examines how great ethnic food...

How the Pandemic Shrank the Higher Ed Workforce

Colleges employed 4 percent fewer people in fall 2020 than they did pre-pandemic, U.S. data show. Community colleges, service workers and part-time employees suffered disproportionately.

MIT Press to Release Many Spring Titles Open Access

Under a new initiative from MIT Press, early purchasing commitments from a subset of libraries will make the spring 2022 slate of monographs and edited collections open access.

WWE Gets In On NIL, Signing Deals With 16 College Athletes

World Wrestling Entertainment has entered the name, image and likeness arena, signing deals with 16 NCAA athletes from various sports...

Reckoning With the Chilling Effect of New State Laws

Why isn’t the American higher education community, Terri Taylor asks, talking more—indeed, doing more—about this broad assault on academic freedom?

Penn Students Seek Online Finals

Students at the University of Pennsylvania are petitioning to have final exams switched to online because COVID-19. More than 500...

Students’ Perceptions of the Benefits of Homework

Homework has never been popular with most students. In today's Academic Minute, Rutgers University's Arnold Glass examines whether students benefit...

‘Enough Is Enough’

Senator Elizabeth Warren has been one of the most vocal lawmakers when it comes to student loans and student debt. In an exclusive interview with Inside Higher Ed, she explains why.