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Four figures walking forward on a blue strip, while another figure walks on a green strip that curves away above them

What’s Your Professional Hero’s Journey?

Linda Louie describes how to tell a great career story to potential employers and others in the midst of trying to make a pivot.

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Creating Community Among Grad Students

Based on their experiences as student organizers, Ryan S. C. Wong and Bayleigh Smith offer recommendations to both institutions and students about effective approaches.

Five people stand on stacks of books at various heights, helping each other up to the top, where one person stands as the leader

Can Scholar Leadership Rescue Academia From Obsolescence?

Fatimah Williams details how cultivating leadership among faculty not only leads to individual and institutional success but also ensures higher ed makes a positive societal impact.

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Credit Where Credit Is Due

David Galef explores the true motives of students asking for extra credit and the results of instructors giving it.

Man in green suit looking apprehensively through door cracked open, with "Success" written on wall to the left

It’s Not Easy Being Green

Jaynie C. Mitchell shares lessons learned firsthand about surviving the uncertain, uncomfortable feeling that comes with each new opportunity as you change jobs or careers.

Four people sitting in chairs writing in a notebook or electronic device

Writing Retreats Through a Professional Development Lens

They can serve as sites for cultivating transferable skills that grad students and postdocs need to be successful in a variety of careers, writes Katie Homar.

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Learning to Live With Disability in Grad School

Universities and departments should provide more resources for faculty, administrators and students to better understand, identify and accommodate invisible ones, writes Zachary Clary.

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Writing Professional Letters of Recommendation

Nearly every educator will be asked to write such letters during their career, and Steve Baule recommends several key items to include.