New report raises concerns about America's appeal to international students; how one college responded after "enrollment fell off a cliff"; and more.
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Faculty
By Emma Pettit

A professor’s behavior was inappropriate enough to warrant punishment but not dismissal. Some students are now protesting vehemently as he returns to teaching. (PREMIUM)

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Enrollment From Abroad
By Karin Fischer

The number of new international students fell for the third year in a row, although that 1-percent decline was not as steep as the nearly 7-percent drop the previous year. (PREMIUM)

Backgrounder
By Karin Fischer

America’s global academic engagement began as a response to 9/11 and ended with the embrace of Trump’s America First platform.

Admissions
By Lawrence Biemiller

After an unexpected boom in students, its entering class fell from 323 to 263, which meant a big decline in tuition revenue. (PREMIUM)

Special Reports

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.

Teaching at HBCUs
By Kathryn Palmer

$3 million in donations will help Morehouse and Spelman Colleges and Prairie View A&M University attract and support professors.  

Teaching
By Beth McMurtrie

A tool created by a professor helps shed light on the gender- and discipline-specific ways in which students judge instructors.

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Advice
By Leonard Cassuto

Can a new gen-ed curriculum in the liberal arts boost undergraduate and graduate education at the same time?

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To win back more of the public’s trust, colleges should stress affordability, work harder to reach new types of students, and be more innovative.

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