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Opinion
From Pfizer to Phi Beta Kappa: Getting Campuses Vaccinated
To encourage students to get vaccines, colleges should consider paying them, write Erin Todd Bronchetti, Ellen Magenheim, Benjamin Bohman, Alfred (Quin) Seivold and Keyan Shayegan.

A Spike in Cheating Since the Move to Remote?
New research finds jump in number of questions submitted to "homework help" website Chegg after start of pandemic, an increase the authors say is very likely linked to rise in cheating.

Return to In-Person Instruction Influenced by Politics
State sociopolitical factors strongly influenced four-year public colleges in their reopening decisions, new working paper finds. County sociopolitical factors played into decision making at private four-year colleges and two-year public colleges.

Australian Universities in ‘Deep Trouble’ as Borders Stay Closed
Full reopening is not expected until 2022. Some fear for Australia's ability to recover pre-pandemic share of international students.

Opinion
Career Readiness in the COVID World
COVID-19 and uprisings for racial justice have called for a thorough transformation of how we prepare students for the professional world, writes Dana Hamdan.

New Variant Meets Its First University
University of Michigan’s stay-at-home order could be a look into the future for other colleges and universities, as new SARS-CoV-2 variants spread across the country.

Opposition to Republican COVID-19 Plan
Democratic chairman of House education committee says coronavirus relief proposal put forth by moderate Republicans is a "drop in the bucket."

COVID-19 Roundup: Warnings, an Apology and Graduation Plans
Villanova warns students after cases rise. A snowball fight at Liberty and fraternity party at Santa Clara draw scrutiny. Vermont restores wages that had been cut, and several universities lay out spring graduation plans.
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