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 United States and Saudi Arabia are looking to rekindle their academic relationship. The Saudi Ministry of Education and the U.S. embassy in Riyadh last month hosted a partnership forum in ...
“I took a helmet to the chest and was feeling immense pain and was unable to raise my arms,” a former player in one of the top college-football conferences — the Southeastern Conference (SEC ...
The Idaho State Board of Education on Wednesday unanimously voted to ban certain race- and gender-conscious policies, initiatives, and cultural centers at its public colleges. Offices and centers ...
Littered throughout the troves of scholarly research are a few peculiar phrases. Allusions to “my last knowledge update.” Sentences beginning with “Certainly,” as in, “Certainly, here ...
W hen you put out into the world a new edition of Karl Marx’s Capital, a book that calls forth passionate debate as few others do, you should expect pushback. Our new English edition of volume ...
This essay is excerpted from a new Chronicle special report, “The Neurodiverse Campus,” available in the Chronicle Store. In August, when we moved our oldest child, Peter, into his dorm room ...
Here they go again, and it’s getting tiresome: politically motivated attacks on the American Historical Association and its counterparts in other disciplines for policies, practices, rhetoric ...
Editor’s note: This story is a collaboration between MinnPost and Open Campus, with support from Ascendium Education Group, and co-published by The Chronicle. Minnesota this year has wiped out ...
I n May 2023, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed a bill preventing colleges in the state system from spending money on diversity, equity, and inclusion programs and banning general-education ...