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Faculty Sanction
A Faculty Committee Recommended Censure, but She Ended Up Suspended Without Pay
New questions surround the harsh penalty meted out to a noted UCLA ecologist. -
The Review | Opinion
The Point of Education Is Not to Reduce Harm
Macalester’s response to a controversial exhibit undermines the liberal arts. -
Leadership
A College’s Controversial Fund-Raising Event Led a Dean to Quit. Now the President Faces Calls to Resign.
Katherine Bergeron has apologized, but critics at Connecticut College point to larger problems with her leadership on DEI. -
Working With the Families of First-Gen Students
ON DEMAND: Join us for this event, in which college administrators will share lessons learned from working with first-gen students and their families. With Support From Ascendium. Watch on demand. -
Striking an admission hurdle
Why One Admissions Official Sees Promise in a New Way of Admitting Students
How much information does a college really need to make an admission offer to a student? -
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Opening the Gates
Congrats! You Didn’t Apply, but We Admitted You Anyway.
New experiments are short-circuiting the admissions process. Here’s why they matter. -
Chasing a Feeling
Everyone Is Talking About ‘Belonging,’ but What Does It Really Mean?
It’s everywhere: in college swag, job titles, grants, training. Yet a sense of belonging is elusive. -
Shocking Numbers
For Black Students, 2 Obstacles to Graduation Loom Large: Discrimination and Responsibilities
More than one in five Black students say they feel discriminated against “frequently” or “occasionally” in their programs, a new survey finds. -
A Question of Budgets
South Carolina Requests Colleges’ DEI Spending, Following Florida and Oklahoma
The request, from the state’s legislators, covers the cost of diversity, equity, and inclusion programs at 33 public colleges and universities.