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27 février 2016

HBCUs: an Unheralded Role in STEM Majors and a Model for Other Colleges

By Ken Leichter. This month Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce released a study showing that African-American students are underrepresented in the college majors that tend to lead to higher-income occupations and overrepresented in majors that tend to lead to lower salaries. More...

27 février 2016

Building a Bridge Between Engineering and the Humanities

By . The engineering field is booming these days. Society regards it as an essential part of innovation, and colleges promote a degree in it as an entry into a fruitful, sustaining career. The humanities, by contrast, are in peril, with fewer students each year. More...

27 février 2016

The Great Expectations of Matthew Desmond

By Marc Parry. The selling of sociology’s next great hope began with a long talk between a literary agent and her potential client. Jill Kneerim was a veteran dealmaker known for helping Boston-area academics publish trade books. More...

27 février 2016

How Scientific Celebrity Hurts Science

By . Why should we believe what scientists have to say? Unlike a lot of people who raise this question, I do believe what scientists have to say — and I am firmly convinced that you should, too. More...

27 février 2016

How Secular Are Secular Ethics?

By Jennifer Michael Hecht. Bernie Sanders recently told The Washington Post that he is not actively involved with a religion, and that his idea of God is that "we’re all in this together." He added that we live better lives when we are compassionate and fair. More...

27 février 2016

Bringing Philosophy to Life

By Nakul Krishna. It was the last day of summer. A bumpkin from the tropics, I’d never seen an autumn before. I watched the first leaves falling outside my tutor’s window and heard the 18th-century staircase creaking with the weight of suitcases being heaved into new rooms. More...

27 février 2016

In Praise of Jargon

By . It’s easy to sneer at academic journals. But they make even the best general-interest magazines look like thin gruel. More...

27 février 2016

When Critics Become Professors

By . In 1956, Yvor Winters, a poet, critic, and professor at Stanford, published an essay (later collected in a slim, quarrelsome book called The Function of Criticism) addressing "Problems for the Modern Critic of Literature." The first of these, he wrote, "is to find a mode of living which will enable him to develop his mind, practice his art, and support his family. The universities offer the obvious solution, but the matter is worth at least brief discussion." More...

27 février 2016

A Haunting History of Incarceration

By Benjamin Reiss. The earliest known prison memoir by an African-American writer shouldn’t be overfreighted with historical implication. More...

27 février 2016

To Be a Black Professor at Yale

By . When Martin Luther King Day comes around, I think that people celebrate the holiday because everything is half-off. When [my teacher] told me about her student that got killed from gun violence, I told myself that I still don’t think that us. More...

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