Filter & Sort
![The blue and white cover of the 1983 report from the United States National Commission on Excellence in Education, "A Nation at Risk."](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-01/Duplicate%20Only%20%2811%29.png?itok=hcB1w6FH)
The Imperative for Workforce Pell
Anthony P. Carnevale argues short-term Pell Grants are key to fulfilling the decades-old promise of gainful employment.
![A drawing of an envelope with a letter peeking out of it that reads, in large red letters, "ACCEPTED!"](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-01/Untitled%20design%20-%202024-01-26T115921.532_e.png?itok=umymCY2B)
Eliminating Early Decision Is Not the Answer
Ending ED isn’t the way to improve access, Robert Massa and Bill Conley write.
![The word "citation" is spelled out using wooden blocks. Other blocks featuring various letters of the alphabet are strewn around.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-01/Untitled%20design%20-%202024-01-26T132503.169.png?itok=oDupw_6d)
In Defense of the Morality of Citation
Giving credit where it’s due is a moral issue, Susan D. Blum writes.
![The book cover for Tobias Becker’s "Yesterday: A New History of Nostalgia" features a pastel-like cloudy sky blending into a sandy ocean beach.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-01/Book_yesterday_01.jpg?itok=GvofEcjP)
Good Old Nostalgia
Scott McLemee reviews Tobias Becker’s Yesterday: A New History of Nostalgia.
![A gold sign that says "President" hangs on a wall.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-01/Untitled%20design%20-%202024-01-24T123322.926_edit.png?itok=ayowWyLX)
Unextreme Vetting
Judith Wilde and James Finkelstein are skeptical search firms will step up their diligence to root out research misconduct.
![A sign prohibiting smartphone usage, featuring a black-and-white drawing of a smartphone inside a red circle with a diagonal slash through it.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-01/GettyImages-914890672I_crop.jpg?itok=6uMoYub-)
Academic Life Without a Smartphone
Jeffrey Herlihy-Mera doesn’t have a smartphone—and he thinks scholars should be asking a lot more questions about how the devices are affecting academic life.
![A black-and-white image of a typewriter fed with a piece of paper with a single typed word: "Plagiarism."](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-01/GettyImages-956463222.jpg?itok=JS0RdPdk)
Plucking Plagiarism’s Low-Hanging Fruit
Tricia Bertram Gallant argues that graduate programs and journals should routinely check dissertations and articles for plagiarism.
![A No. 2 pencil with a well-worn eraser lies atop a standardized test form with multiple choice bubbles. The three bubbles in the foreground of the picture read “SAT.”](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-12/Untitled%20design%20%28100%29.png?itok=4c1nLapq)
What Does ‘Test Optional’ Really Mean?
Should students submit scores? It’s hard for them to tell, a point of confusion that points to deeper problems, Ben Paris writes.
Pagination
Pagination
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