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Opinion
Attacked from Both Sides
Growing efforts to curtail free speech and academic freedom endanger the ability to cultivate the informed citizenry on which our democracy depends, write David Wippman and Glenn C. Altschuler.

Vaccinations, Unions and the Law
Colleges and universities increasingly want their students and employees to get the jab. Cases involving vaccines within the University of California and other institutions begin to define the legal terrain.

Loan Repayment Pause Continues
While the announcement was generally met with praise, it was accompanied by continued calls for the Biden administration to do more to address the student debt crisis.

Joint Faculty Hire Spotlights Disability
Florida State’s creative writing program wanted one professor but hired two. The fact that they were both disabled was something of an afterthought, but the professors say the move matters -- and follows years of activism on the part of disabled scholars.

Impostor Feelings and ‘Brilliance’ Fields
Women -- especially women of color -- and graduate students and postdocs are more likely to think they don’t belong in fields perceived to value genius over training, study says.

Opinion
Designing Courses for Introverts and Extroverts
Faculty members should identify ways to include significant learning experiences that champion both types of students, write Zala Fashant and Linda Russell.

Cries of Union Busting at a Florida College
Professor says he was trying to raise his colleagues’ pay and lost his job in the process.

‘Indentured Students’
Author discusses her book on the history of student loans -- and of missed opportunities that left students awash in debt.
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