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Who Really Bears the Cost of Hiring Adjuncts?

An instructor argues that the colleges that shortchange their adjuncts are ultimately compromising the students they exist to serve.

Past Its Peak

Over the past century and a half or so, petroleum has been abundant and relatively easy to extract, Scott McLemee writes. The next 150 years -- in fact, the next 15 -- do not look quite so promising.

Forever Is a Long, Long Time

Colleges should rethink perpetual endowments that honor the donor but thwart good stewardship today, writes John Thelin.

Two Steps to a Saner, Sounder Admissions Process

We must make structural changes across thousands of colleges, Carol Barash argues -- not just rely on the good intentions of a privileged few.

Trumpeting a New Dean

A major contender in the presidential race is leaving it to join academe, at least in the dreamworld inhabited by Mark J. Drozdowski.

Revive Perkins Loans

Unless we can accommodate growing numbers of needy students, the consequences for them, for higher education and for our country’s future are enormous, writes Ray Cross.

Isn't It Shocking?

The new movie Experimenter, about social psychologist Stanley Milgram, makes the ethical questions concerning the deception and mistreatment of research participants much more tangible and pressing, says Scott McLemee.

Margaret Spellings's Vision for Higher Education

What might the new head of a leading university system do as president? Johann Neem looks at her federal commission's report for clues, and is not heartened.