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Holding Pattern

The highs and lows of halting your research during COVID-19.

Is Higher Ed Asking the Wrong Questions?

During a time of crisis, people are prone to focus on the tactical, but what we know already suggests we should be thinking longer term and for greater disruption, writes José Antonio Bowen.

Tuition Policy in a Pandemic

Rather than cut tuition for newly online classes, colleges should help students affected by the pandemic to afford them, argues Robert J. Massa.

Academics Can and Should Influence Important Policy Debates

Michelle Dimino gives advice for how scholars can break down silos between the academic and legislative spheres.

After the Adrenaline Rush: Chairing Through Prolonged Crisis

Rashida Banerjee, Hava Gordon, Andrea Stanton and Keith Ward advise how department chairs can translate this spring's emergency responses into leadership approaches for a crisis that could last well into fall.

What Worked?

Looking for accidental discoveries from the Great Evacuation.

How College Students Can Help Reopen America

States could use some of their federal stimulus funds to create corps of contact tracers in service-learning courses, Terry Hartle and David Stone argue.

A Casualty of COVID-19 Employment Cuts Speaks Up

It may be easier for institutions to think associate lecturers should be the first to be let go when things get tough, writes Clarissa Eaton, but our colleagues and students need us.