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Flipped Online Course Improves Math Success
Claire Stuve says research conducted by the University of Toledo shows that blended and adaptive learning lead to the most successful outcomes.
A Memory of Total Eclipse
As we await the arrival of the next solar eclipse, Scott McLemee describes how a group of Chinese researchers bravely studied one almost 50 years ago.
Giving People What They Paid For
Drew Story outlines a simple approach academics can use to increase access to research and restore its public value.
Ethical College Admissions: Overbooking and Lessons From Irvine
Jim Jump says there are legitimate reasons to withdraw an acceptance, but he's not sure the university had them for most of those briefly told they couldn't enroll.
Bad Idea About Writing: Anybody Can Teach It
The system at too many colleges is stuck in a cycle of insisting that some work is lower value than other work, then using the fact that it abuses the people who do that work as proof of its low value, argues Seth Kahn.
Affirmative Action: Now More Than Ever
Michael S. Roth discusses why we must resist efforts to restrict affirmative action.
The President as Mentor for Tackling Hard Questions
The time is right for a more courageous approach to difficult conversations, writes Ronald A. Crutcher, who meets regularly with students to discuss controversial issues across lines of difference.
Online Courses as Good as In-Person Classes
Fred Lokken disagrees with a recent “Views” contributor who wrote that online education isn’t working -- and provides data to prove his points.
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