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A Goal Worthy of Our Commitment
In-person instruction is more important than ever as our nation wrestles not only with a pandemic but also with myriad crises, write Viviana Geron, a student, and Marie Lynn Miranda, a provost.
Graduate Professionalization in the Age of Student Debt
The often unmanageable debt many Ph.D.s accrue necessitates a candid discussion of grad students' finances, training and potential career paths within and outside academe, writes Jennifer Torkelson.
Why America Needs College Football -- Part 2
Matthew J. Mayhew apologizes for an article that he recently wrote for Inside Higher Ed and describes beginning a long process of antiracist learning.
The Empowered University
Despite the unprecedented challenges of the pandemic, we can and should keep hope alive through deliberate effort and commitment, write Freeman A. Hrabowski, Philip J. Rous and Sarah J. Shin.
Recruiting Chinese Students: A Review of the Problems
Xiaofeng Wan reviews the obstacles but offers reason to hope for the future.
End Legacy Admissions
Look at the number of seats legacy preferences get and compare them to Black applicants, writes Joseph Price.
L’Affaire Krug and Contemporary Wokeism
The controversy over a white professor passing herself off as Black reveals an underlying contradiction in how we view race, Peter C. Herman writes.
Why America Needs College Football
Essentializing college football might help get us through these uncharacteristically difficult times of great isolation, division and uncertainty, Matthew J. Mayhew and Musbah Shaheen contend.
Pagination
Pagination
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