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Feeling the Spirit

Scott McLemee ruminates on the memoir of Barbara Ehrenreich, who, while more or less an agnostic, undergoes what sounds like the sort of crisis described by saints and mystics.

A Faculty Stand on Assessment

To do justice to students and as a matter of professional duty, faculty members should be at the center of defining and measuring undergraduate learning outcomes, argue Josipa Roksa and Richard Arum.

The Real Threat to Free Expression

How young people armed with smartphones became so unable or unwilling in critical instances to talk to each other is a fundamental question for higher education, writes Jeffrey Herbst.

Pedestrian Pedagogy

Literally walking side by side with students while teaching a class can bring unexpected benefits, writes Del Doughty.

Searching for the Humanities

John Fea, a history chair, describes what he learned on his daughter's college tours about the presence or absence of a liberal arts ethos.

The Faculty's Complicity

Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn takes issue with arguments that the erosion of faculty members' participation in shared governance is entirely due to forces beyond their control.

Language, Racism and a Protest

Dick Gregory writes that students who are protesting against a dean who recommended his autobiography should think about which battles matter the most.

Culture Gulch

Scott McLemee reviews Terry Eagleton's new book, Culture, which unpacks the concept in its title.