Filter & Sort
![An overhead view of a densely attended pro-Palestinian rally on Harvard's campus: Palestinian flags are visible, as are signs, including one that reads "Stop the Genocide."](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-10/GettyImages-1724313013.jpg?itok=LwrI6bmp)
A Duty of Care
In their responses to the Israel-Hamas conflict, many faculty members and administrators seem to have lost sight of their students’ well-being, Ben Sorkin writes.
![The word "Doxing" in block letters against a white background featuring a plant.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-10/doxing.png?itok=DOfuKw5a)
The Failure of FERPA
The Harvard doxing-truck debacle lays bare FERPA’s obsolescence in the digital age—and why protecting student privacy matters to their learning now more than ever, Sarah Hartman-Caverly writes.
![A stack of books, with the top book open.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-10/BOOKS.png?itok=IxzibcSe)
A New Definition of the Humanities
It’s time for a better—and more strategic—definition, Jeffrey R. Wilson writes.
![A close-up of Ben Sasse’s face, with his chin resting on his folded hands. He is a light-skinned man with short dark hair who is wearing a suit.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-10/GettyImages-1387145556.jpg?itok=0GWniccA)
Don’t Sass Us, Ben Sasse
The University of Florida president is not afraid to make a strong statement—just not about affairs in his own state, Walter M. Kimbrough writes.
![Woodburn Hall at West Virginia University.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-10/woodburn_hall_wvu.png?itok=0u85uXqV)
A Liberal Education in Name Only
A liberal arts education means something, and colleges that slash programs should stop using the term in their promises to students, Christopher A. Snyder writes.
![A graphic with the word "scholarship" in a cloud-shaped bubble, against the background of a desk, with a keyboard and school supplies visible in the background.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-10/scholarship_cloud.png?itok=NqSD79UU)
Designing Scholarships With Intention
Choices in scholarship design and administration can determine whether scholarships open doors for students or (unintentionally) close them, Krista Chronister and tia north write.
![An overhead view of smoke billowing over Gaza City in the aftermath of Israeli air strikes.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-10/GettyImages-1719882300.jpg?itok=Vs7Wi8Kc)
Who Can Speak? Between Power, Silence and Complicity
As the Israel-Palestine conflict escalates, faculty members are fearful of speaking up, Reshmi Dutt-Ballerstadt and Johnny E. Williams write.
![Book jacket for James L. Shulman's "The Synthetic University: How Higher Education Can Benefit From Shared Solutions and Save Itself."](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-10/Duplicate%20Only%20%286%29.png?itok=VJ4etV0L)
Can Cost Sharing Save Higher Ed?
Glenn Altschuler and David Wippman review James L. Shulman’s The Synthetic University: How Higher Education Can Benefit From Shared Solutions and Save Itself.
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