Chasing prestige starts to strain some elite colleges; decision could imperil some accreditors; why adjuncts might soon not be paid at all; and more.
Academe Today

Was this newsletter forwarded to you? Please sign up to receive your own copy. You’ll support our journalism and ensure that you continue to receive our emails.

Leadership
Image
Stephen Pingry, Tulsa World
By Lauren Fisher

Faculty members accuse the University of Tulsa’s top leaders of working to silence critics of a plan that will slash the liberal arts. Administrators say the restructuring move is about survival. (PREMIUM)

ADVERTISEMENT

advertisement
Finance
By Dan Bauman

Among highly selective institutions, there are actually two separate groups, the elites and the super-elites, experts say. (PREMIUM)

Accreditation
By Eric Kelderman

The agency’s denial of recognition to a new nursing accreditor has left some higher-education experts confused and concerned about a possible new interpretation of existing regulations. (PREMIUM)

Learning
By Beckie Supiano

A paper drawing on survey responses from some 20,000 college graduates seeks to extend the discussion of college returns to include intellectual, civic, and psychological outcomes. (PREMIUM)

Global
By Karin Fischer

Without Chinese co-authors, the number of scholarly articles published by American researchers in science and engineering would have declined, a new study finds. And other top news in global higher education.

Want to stay ahead of the trends affecting international-student recruitment and global higher ed? Sign up to get the Global Newsletter, with insight from the veteran Chronicle reporter Karin Fischer.

Subscribe Today

The Chronicle’s award-winning journalism challenges conventional wisdom, holds academic leaders accountable, and empowers you to do your job better — and it’s your support that makes our work possible.

Subscribe Today
C

Views

The Chronicle Review
Image
Art Valero for The Chronicle
By Leigh Claire La Berge

Think adjuncts are underpaid now? Soon, they might not get paid at all. (PREMIUM)

ADVERTISEMENT

advertisement
Paid for and Created by Stony Brook University

A leader in social mobility, Stony Brook University is creating a proven path of upward mobility for first-generation and underrepresented students.

New in the Store

Higher education has seen continued growth since the mid-20th century, but the pool of students likely to attend college is projected to rapidly decrease. This report traces the turbulent future of enrollment numbers and tuition revenue. Purchase a copy in the Chronicle Store.


Sign up for other newsletters, stop receiving this email, or view our privacy policy.

© 2019 The Chronicle of Higher Education

1255 23rd Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20037

The Chronicle of Higher Education