Happy holidays! As we do at the end of each year, The Review asked a dozen of our contributors to recommend scholarly books ...
Accountability and test-based reforms, pandemic-era disruptions, and larger social and economic pressures have fostered ...
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W aded Cruzado couldn’t imagine leading Montana State University — a place she thought would be too cold, too forbidding, and too different from her Caribbean roots. It was 2009, and a ...
While higher-ed leaders fret over policy changes expected under President-elect Donald J. Trump, another deadline may be closer on the horizon. If a bill passed by both chambers of Congress is ...
Gen Z is a puzzle to many professors. Over the last year, The Chronicle has published a series of stories on attitudes and behaviors among young people that makes teaching them a challenge.
These efforts to sanitize and censor public universities’ core curricula represent a fundamental misunderstanding of the purpose of general education as a mechanism for developing democratic ...
Any regular reader of this newsletter could probably guess the topic of our most popular issue this year. Yes, it was AI, specifically the issue “When AI Is Everywhere, What Should Instructors ...
The Chronicle now takes its customary holiday publishing break. No newsletters are planned until January 2, but we will continue to update our website as news happens. If important news breaks ...