A seemingly harmless, inconsequential combination of words can really get in your way, argues Mike Firmand. More...
11 janvier 2020
A seemingly harmless, inconsequential combination of words can really get in your way, argues Mike Firmand. More...
Departments and professional societies have begun to consider what it means to find jobs for Ph.D.s outside academe, writes Zeb Larson, but the options frequently presented are unnecessarily limited. More...
Melissa Dalgleish explores why academics tend to keep doing what they're good at -- and why that can be a trap. More...
Any proposal to spend federal dollars on higher education should concentrate on those who actually need the help, for otherwise it is money wasted, argues David Kirp. More...
The many bottlenecks that the commercial monopoly on research information has imposed are stimulating new strategies, write James W. Weis, Amy Brand and Joi Ito. More...
If you actually want to help people, then ask others to do something, writes Alex Small. More...
I appreciate the attention Colleen Flaherty gave to the nuances of my recent firing from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. The Southwestern case presents questions about academic freedom, race, the humanities and hidden misconduct in the Christian education world. More...
Scott McLemee explores various scholars' rationales for self-plagiarism. More...
What if the best about composition teaching, Deborah L. Williams asks, became the pedagogical default instead of the exception. More...
Scott McLemee reviews Francis Su's Mathematics for Human Flourishing. More...