Public colleges double down on merit aid; judge overturns UNC's controversial Silent Sam deal; unmet mental-health needs; and more.
Academe Today

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Students
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By Eric Hoover

Accepted applicants who submit an enrollment deposit to Albion College by March 6 will be entered in a drawing. Prizes include a free meal plan. (PREMIUM)

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Backgrounder
By Eric Hoover

How retail tactics are reshaping student recruitment. (PREMIUM)

Admissions & Student Aid
By Emma Dill

Amid heightened financial pressure, the institutions are increasingly offering aid based not on students’ financial need but on merit. (PREMIUM)

Backgrounder
By Karin Fischer

The idea that college is a ladder to the middle class has long been part of the American Dream. What happened?

The Shadow of the Past
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Julia Wall, News & Observer, TNS, Getty
By Francie Diep

The Sons of Confederate Veterans will no longer get the statue, nor the $2.5 million that came with it.

Special Reports

Silent Sam, a statue of a Confederate soldier, dominated the main entrance of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for more than a century, until it was toppled, in 2018, by protesters. But that didn’t resolve the question of what to do with it. Here’s background on the dispute.

International
By Karin Fischer

The number of new graduate students enrolled in American colleges increased by 4 percent in the fall of 2019; and other top news in global higher ed. 

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.

Paid for and Created by University of Glasgow

On August 23, 2019, the University of Glasgow publicly acknowledged its links to slavery. Instead of “researching and running,” university decision-makers chose to begin making reparations.

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Views

Advice
By Bhargavi Bharadwaj

“Remember, you chose to come here,” the faculty adviser admonished. “It was your choice.”

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In Case You Missed It
By L. Maren Wood

A new project seeks to measure the extent of the mental-health crisis not just in graduate school but beyond it, among early-career Ph.D.s.

Paid for and Created by University of Birmingham

Medical researchers at the University of Birmingham looking for ways to alleviate brain pressure have found a drug that may also be suitable for voyaging to outer space.

New in the Store

This brief explores how institutions can create financial stability, adapt to an ever-evolving market, and emerge from an economic downturn stronger and savvier. Some institutions never fully recovered from the last recession, but with strong leadership, strategic mission-driven planning, and a continued emphasis on student success, they can be better equipped to mitigate the impact of the next economic downturn.


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