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Could Your Syllabus Be More Supportive of Students?

The syllabus offers a first impression of a professor and signals what that instructor believes about students and their ability to succeed, writes Samantha Levine.

A Plan to Save the Daily Paper

Peter Laufer writes that journalism schools could help save daily papers—and calls on Gannett to donate the Eugene Register-Guard to Oregon’s J-school as proof of concept.

Student Health and Climate Awareness: We Can Have Both

Educators can help students transform climate anxiety into meaningful action, writes Paul F. Steinberg.

Clarity of Purpose

Bundling research and teaching into one business model can result in misalignments that hurt students, Scott Pulsipher writes.
Opinion

When AI Is Writing, Who Is the Author?

The language of co-authorship, taken from OpenAI’s own terms and policies, can be useful in addressing the rise of AI writing in the classroom, Sean Ross Meehan writes.
Opinion

With ChatGPT, We’re All Editors Now

Artificial intelligence should prompt a reorientation of writing instruction to focus more on critical reading and editing skills, Rachel Elliott Rigolino writes.

Ethical College Admissions: What to Investigate?

Jim Jump considers the Virginia attorney general’s fight with the Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology.

On Being Erased

Florida’s decision to reject a new Advanced Placement class on African American studies raises unsettling questions, Lynn Pasquerella and Mary Dana Hinton write.