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‘My Class Is Different!’

Many professors rightly question whether research on the impact of classroom technology applies in their context, Kara McWilliams writes. Here’s how to conduct studies they can really use.

Why the AAUP Opposes Both Boycotts and Restrictions on Their Supporters

No one is obligated to support a boycott, but opposition to one does not justify silencing its advocates, argues Henry Reichman.

Lessons Learned From a College Merger

Robert A. Brown and David J. Chard offer lessons on how Wheelock College has joined Boston University to create a larger public mission.

College Readiness Courses and Work-Force Development

Readiness courses offered through partnerships between high schools and colleges can help ensure that more K-12 graduates have the knowledge and skills they need for college, write Elisabeth Barnett, John Squires and Jennifer Zinth.

Ethical College Admissions: Doing the Charleston

Jim Jump analyzes the flip-flop on the consideration of race in admissions.
Illustration of students at desks

The Dawn of a New Meritocracy

Colleges need to consider the implications of the move away from standardized testing in admissions, writes Ezekiel Dixon-Román.

Ink and After

Scott McLemee further explores The Mediated Mind by Susan Zieger and the impact that expanded distribution of printed material in the 19th century had on what the world felt like.

Whose (Medieval) Congress Is It Anyway?

If we brand our colleagues our enemies and make winning a social media altercation more crucial than the common good, then collegial compromise, negotiation and tolerance will be stamped out, argues Richard Utz.