Women students argue that the administration’s approach to halting gender discrimination has endangered gender-exclusive spaces that weren’t part of the problem.
Faculty members are concerned that students can’t afford the books they need, a new survey found. And for many instructors, open educational resources still aren’t the answer.
The agreement comes after a four-year battle between university officials and two professors over their First Amendment rights to criticize administrators in a blog.
This young sector probably gets more attention than its results have merited. But new relationships with Yale and Harvard demonstrate why it remains relevant.
Colleges face growing demands to hire more minority faculty members. But doing so requires revamping how search committees usually operate, confronting unconscious bias, and improving the Ph.D. pipeline. This collection examines how colleges are changing to bolster their faculty ranks with more people from underrepresented minority groups. Get your copy in the Chronicle Store.
New Zealand college grads put their ingenuity to the test to design the entirely new post-apocalyptic world in the science-fiction film Mortal Engines.