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Academe’s Other Diversity Problem

As scholars, if we don't take comprehensive approaches to social problems, we'll neglect needed policies to address inequalities, argues Michael Jindra.

Asian Americans, Recognized at Last

Last week's Atlanta attacks marked a turning point, writes Frank H. Wu.

Peer Tutoring in the Pandemic

In an era of online learning, it can be key to making struggling students feel more connected to their college community and better able to tackle academic challenges, writes Doug Kovel.

Who Shall Teach?

In the midst of the pandemic and our nation's reckoning with racial injustice, it's more important than ever to determine how best to staff college classrooms, write David Figlio and Morton Schapiro.

7 Things High School Juniors Can Do Now

They are pretty much the same things as before the pandemic, writes Susan Chan Shifflett.

Higher Ed Leaders Should Keep Engaging on Immigration

Efforts to undo harmful recent policies and practices are necessary and important, but not sufficient, argue Louis Caldera, Nancy Cantor and Alan W. Cramb.

Debias Yourself to Debias Your Teaching

Anne Gordon explores how implicit bias plays out in the ways law school professors, as well as those in other disciplines, engage with students -- and what can be done to mitigate it.

Another Pandemic

Zhenyu Yuan captures in poetry the experience of being Chinese in the time of COVID-19.