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It Probably Won’t Save Your Life
Although colleges and universities have spent tens of millions of dollars on complex emergency communications systems to try to make campuses safer, the technology has serious limitations, warns Bill Mahon.
Dialing Back the Rhetoric
Mike Spivey describes his experience serving as the conservative on his college’s postelection panel.
Crafting a Successful Cover Letter
To stand out, a cover letter must be outstanding: smart, engaging, concrete, detailed and polished to perfection. Melissa Dennihy gives pointers on how to do that.
The Jobs To Be Done Framework and 'Competing Against Luck'
Can Clay Christensen move beyond disruption theory and The Innovators Dilemma?
People Are Infrastructure, Part II: Poaching
Colleges and universities lose talented people because, increasingly, campus opportunities are not competitive with options elsewhere.
Addressing Gender Inequalities in African Refugee Education
Creating a university in a refugee camp was wrought with challenges: unreliable electricity and internet connectivity, lack of technological infrastructure, language gaps, skill gaps, security concerns, more.
Moving Your Kids: My House or the White House
Important decisions -- sometimes in the public eye.
Helping Students Embrace Discomfort
In a democracy, students need to learn to live with a high tolerance for ambiguity, writes José Antonio Bowen.
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