Filter & Sort
![A picture of a balance scale with a sack of money on one side and a pile of textbooks and a graduation mortar board on the other.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-05/GettyImages-1197933534.jpg?itok=ybBavkeH)
Don’t Roll Back Progress on Textbook Affordability
Course material costs have been coming down, but an Education Department proposal puts that progress in jeopardy, Eric Weil and Michael Moore write.
![The word “respect,” spelled out in multicolored letters, each tacked onto a cork board with colorful pushpins..](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-05/GettyImages-119950179.jpg?itok=GYY6kK9d)
Rethinking Respect
Colleges can help students cultivate civic respect—a value more easily affirmed than granted in our polarized climate, Jeff Spinner-Halev and Elizabeth Theiss-Morse write.
![A drawing depicting a passport and an F-1 student visa; the latter document is stamped, in red, with the word “Rejected.”](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-05/GettyImages-1368111296.jpg?itok=YyQRKOaa)
Student Visa Denials Threaten U.S. Competitiveness
College leaders should focus immigration lobbying efforts on state lawmakers, in addition to federal ones, Samba Dieng writes.
![The red, white and blue book jacket for John Rennie Short’s “Insurrection: What the January 6 Assault on the Capitol Reveals about America and Democracy,” which depicts a watermark-like image of the QAnon shaman holding an American flag.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-05/Book_Insurrection.jpg?itok=FNs-CYSU)
Insurrection
Scott McLemee reviews John Rennie Short’s Insurrection: What the January 6 Assault on the Capitol Reveals about America and Democracy.
![A computer screen and a smartphone both bear the logo and name of “ChatGPT” against a white background.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-05/GettyImages-2149398525.jpg?itok=TFry5oPN)
GPTs for Scholars: Enablers of Shoddy Research?
The GPTs that offer scholarly citations may eliminate the issue of hallucinated (fake) citations, but they pose other problems, Mohammad Hosseini and Kristi Holmes write.
![The headline and subhead for Ben Sasse's recent The Wall Street Journal op-ed is overlaid against a photo of Sasse, who is smiling widely. The text reads: "The Adults Are Still in Charge at the University of Florida: Higher education isn't daycare. Here are the rules we follow on free speech and public protests." Below that text, in smaller print, there is an attribution: "Ben Sasse, University of Florida President/Commentary in The Wall Street Journal"](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-05/Ben_Sasse_commentary.jpg?itok=p5W5wPvY)
The Unbearable Hypocrisy of Ben Sasse
The University of Florida president ignores the most serious threats facing higher ed, Brian Rosenberg writes.
![A man wearing an orange T-shirt has his head down on an open textbook as he holds up a cardboard sign with the word “HELP” in capital red letters on it.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-05/GettyImages-2150616781.jpg?itok=Dib_UlkH)
Three Ways to Create a Culture of Help-Seeking Behavior on Campus
The act of asking for help is something that doesn’t come naturally to all students, and higher ed has a responsibility to invest in efforts to improve help-seeking, write student success professionals Cecilia Santiago-González and Zoe Lance at Cal Poly Pomona.
![Two students, one wearing a keffiyeh, embrace in front of pitched tents at Brown University.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-05/GettyImages-2150357500.jpg?itok=U8ra4eLG)
Concessions to Protesters Validate Their Tactics
Sara Coodin writes that college leaders should resist the temptation to reward student disruptors in the name of campus peace.
Pagination
Pagination
- 5
- /
- 763