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How the Critical Interview Became a Major Academic Genre
Under the radar as a form of scholarly writing, it has become ubiquitous, explaining the gnarly terrain of theory and arcane realms of scholarship, writes Jeffrey J. Williams.
Ethical College Admissions: What Parents Won't Accept
Even at the best of schools, there are some things a parent doesn't want to hear, writes Jim Jump.
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Common Sense on Colleges and Work-Force Development
Much of the current debate about education for work has a heavy air of unreality about it, writes Kevin P. Reilly.
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Screen Memories
Scott McLemee reviews Kate Eichhorn's The End of Forgetting: Growing Up With Social Media.
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Veblen Saw It Coming
Several characterizations of the wealthy in his writings seem especially relevant to the ongoing admissions scandal, Mike Martin observes.
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Let the Professors Run the University
Faculty members need to reassert themselves as the people who direct discourse on campuses, argues Samuel J. Abrams.
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We Need a 'Communiversity' Model of Public Education
The economy requires an aggressive shift to a system, writes Kenneth Ender, where public colleges are stitched together with K-12 and local nonprofits and feature an electronic backbone of support.
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Philanthropy for the New Majority
Mort Maimon, a president's spouse, describes why he financially supports students who confront obstacles to obtaining a college degree.
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