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Ethical College Admissions: Baked Alaska
Jim Jump asks, is it legitimate to take advantage of another's hardship?
Academe and Anomie
Nothing in our job descriptions requires us to be the best ever with the most publications in the best journals with the most grant money, writes Michael Rocque, so we should stop comparing and ranking ourselves.
A Man of Many Words
Peter Martin's The Dictionary Wars: The American Fight Over the English Language shows Noah Webster as the sort of ideologue who's convinced he has a historical mission and carries himself accordingly, writes Scott McLemee.
Games Colleges Play in Presidential Searches
Competition among the viewpoints of various observers, writes John Thelin, ultimately centers on a crucial question: Should academic searches be closed or open?
A Sure Bet
Imprisoned people are desperate to become students, and that desire and economics mandate that we heed their calls, argues Doran Larson.
Why We Urgently Need to Retool International Affairs Education
Events in the news provide constant evidence that we can't ignore different societies’ diversity and heterogeneity in our academic programs, argues Carla Koppell.
Ethical College Admissions: Trust and Verify
Operation Varsity Blues raises questions about why college admissions officers don't review every application, writes Jim Jump.
Unintentionally Fostering Inequality
Food-delivery robots are a perfect metaphor for a culture of entitlement that divides students from each other on campuses as well as from the rest of society, argues Clara M. Lovett.
Pagination
Pagination
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