Why online ed is an overlooked policy lever; a passion for work fosters exploitation in academe; how Google scrambled the academic mind; and more.
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Town-Gown
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Michelle Langhout
By Jack Stripling

Local politics and charges of racism loom over calls for Jack Thomas’s removal at Western Illinois University. (PREMIUM)

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The Edge
By Goldie Blumenstyk

In all but 17 states, online education is more of an export than an import. That’s a missed opportunity for policy makers to champion things like access and affordability.

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Research
By Will Jarvis

Research from Duke University concludes that one’s passion for work could lead to exploitative managerial conduct. (PREMIUM)

In Case You Missed It
By Kevin Birmingham

How the humanities survive on exploitation.

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The Chronicle Review
By Timothy Messer-Kruse

Experts once structured and categorized knowledge. Now search engines do that task. The result? Anarchy. (PREMIUM)

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When building an online course, the pedagogy must drive the technology, not the reverse.

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