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Historical Inaccuracy on Selective Admissions

Essay on the Supreme Court's decision misconstrues key issues.

The Servant Leader in Higher Education

One of the greatest leaders in the history of the United States commonly closed his correspondence with “Your obedient servant, A. Lincoln.”

A photograph showing "AI" lit up against a dark, futuristic background. Next to the image are two red question marks.

Why Aren’t We Asking Questions of AI?

As students and professors grow more skilled at commanding chatbots to produce the outputs they want, Sean Ross Meehan wonders what this will mean for question-based inquiry. 

Chaos Kings audio book by Scott Patterson

‘Chaos Kings’, Climate Change, and Black Swan Events

Why reading about hedge funds is a great way to think about how university leaders should think about low-probability/high-impact events.

Guest Post: A ChatGPT Teaching Experiment

Start with your core pedagogical values when it comes to incorporating ChatGPT.

What’s Happening to Today’s Families and Children

What’s right and what’s wrong with families today.

Room that's clearly being moved into with a sofa and other furniture, along with moving boxes labeled books and the like

Metaphors We Teach By

They come and go, waxing and waning as regularly as pedagogical trends, but they can have significant impacts, writes Zachary Michael Jack.

A collection of open books and notebooks, plus some black-and-white pictures, strewn on a table, as if being actively used for research. The books have an appearance of oldness.

Does Humanities Research Still Matter?

The rapid collapse in available research funding is one crisis in the humanities we aren’t talking enough about, Asheesh Kapur Siddique writes.