Revenues are fuzzy, and every new safety measure carries a price tag; students demand that more colleges break ties with local police; and more.
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Finance
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Son of Alan for The Chronicle
By Scott Carlson

Revenues are fuzzy, and every new safety measure carries a price tag. (PREMIUM)

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Special Reports

What will it look like? What needs to happen? To explore the answers, read this new series and sign up for virtual events.

Campus Safety
By Katherine Mangan

Ohio State, the University of Virginia, and the University of Louisville are among a growing number of campuses where students have called for funds to be diverted to other purposes. (PREMIUM)

Academic Labor
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Nina Westervelt, courtesy of Professional Staff Congress/CUNY
By Emma Pettit

Further cuts would be “educationally damaging, economically misguided, and cruel,” their letter says. (PREMIUM)

Admissions
By Eric Hoover

The testing organization is putting plans for an online, take-at-home version of the exam on hold — and asking colleges to adjust to testing disruption.

Poor Timing
By Katherine Mangan

The New School calls it a “painful but necessary” choice. Health workers say it’s retaliation for their unionizing.

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Through Loyola Marymount University’s Coastal Research Institute, student researchers collect and analyze data to predict the impacts of climate change on the coastline. Learn how LMU students are critical in finding solutions to LA’s biggest issues.

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Views

Advice
By Javier Miyares and Darren Catalano

Lessons from an institution that came back from the brink. (PREMIUM)

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Special Reports

As colleges and universities have struggled to devise policies to respond to the quickly evolving situation, here are links to The Chronicle’s key coverage of how this worldwide health crisis is affecting campuses.

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Placing an emphasis on the people and learning side of leadership, the ideal Ed.D. program would offer a flexible curriculum based on leadership and change, research, analysis and synthesis as well as a global perspective.

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We reached out to college staff members, professors, and administrators with a straightforward question: How will the pandemic change higher education? Order the collection to hear what they had to say. Chronicle subscribers: Access this premium content free.

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