By Joya Misra and Jennifer Lundquist. Peer review can sting, write Joya Misra and Jennifer Lundquist, but continued revision is the lifeblood of scholarship. Read more...
Résumé Advice From a Magical Place
By Joseph Barber. Some of the distinct aspects of Disney World can be relevant when it comes to thinking about your own professional branding, writes Joseph Barber. Read more...
How Do You Teach the Presidency?
By Michael Nelson. While Michael Nelson may be doing everything wrong in his upper-level undergraduate course on the American presidency, he finds it somehow seems to work. Read more...
Top 4 Reasons Professionals Help Students and Postdocs
By Thomas Magaldi. Students and postdocs should not be wary of asking for help from professionals in their network, argues Thomas Magaldi, as they provide those professionals certain valuable assets. Read more...
Lessons From the Tragedy of the Commons
By Harold M. Hastings. We in higher education must act on our collective responsibility to support America's public universities, writes Harold M. Hastings. Read more...
Coming in 2017
By Lisa M. Rudgers and Julie A. Peterson. Colleges and universities should prepare for seven key trends in the new year, Lisa M. Rudgers and Julie A. Peterson advise. Read more...
Colleges Should Abandon Early Admissions
By Harold O. Levy. The disadvantage they confer on low-income students is a fatal flaw, argues Harold O. Levy. Read more...
Swimming Against the Current
By Samuel J. Abrams. Given the well-known ideological imbalance of professors on our nation’s college and university campuses, quite a bit has been written about how conservative faculty members are a “beleaguered minority,” the rare “campus unicorns” and even “a minority [which] is being systematically repressed in America’s elite institutions.” Read more...
Compassion Is No Substitute for Competence
By Ted Gup. Higher education institutions are woefully unprepared to handle the complexity of rape cases, argues Ted Gup. Read more...
Three Questions for Higher Education
By Dan Greenstein. We need to engage in a serious dialogue about our role in exacerbating the opportunity gap and our obligation to close it, argues Dan Greenstein. Read more...