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Is Students' Early Career Success Their Professors' Problem?
A new paper asserts the faculty's obligation to embrace "career-relevant instruction." What exactly does that mean, for professors and students?

Coronavirus Forces Universities Online
Compelled to close their campuses to limit the spread of coronavirus, U.S. universities with Chinese branches move at lightning speed to take teaching online.

Course Hero Woos Professors
The company's website for sharing course materials is popular with students but a decade ago raised faculty hackles over copyright and enabling cheating. Has its outreach to professors changed the narrative?

India Opens the Door Wide for Online Learning
The Indian government is opening up the market for fully online degrees, and U.S. companies are poised to be players.

CUNY's Move on Corporate Tuition Benefits
City University of New York joins ASU spin-off InStride in effort to tap into growing online degree market for companies that offer college tuition benefits to employees.

Time for a Tune-Up?
During the last decade, historians worked together to commonly define graduates' desired skills, knowledge and "habits of mind." Here's what that "tuning" accomplished -- and where it fell short.

Prepping for a Community College Career
Doctoral education doesn't necessarily prepare future faculty members for the jobs they're likely to get at teaching-intensive institutions. A new grant program takes aim at that problem.

Key Senators Turn Up Heat on OPMs
Old issues with online program management companies get new attention in Washington.
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