Filter & Sort
Filter
SORT BY DATE
Order

Michigan State Restores Some of the Pay Faculty Lost

Michigan State University is giving all nonunionized faculty and academic staff 2 percent merit raises effective Jan. 1, The Lansing...

China Responds to New COVID-19 Outbreak

China has confined nearly 1,500 university students to their dormitories and hotels following an outbreak of COVID-19 in the city...

The Post-9/11 Generation’s Perceptions of Safety

The effects of Sept. 11 are still being felt today. In today's Academic Minute, SUNY New Paltz's Karla Vermeulen determines...

Capital Campaigns Make a Comeback

During the pandemic, fundraising mainly supported emergency funds to keep students healthy and enrolled in college. This fall, colleges are unveiling broad capital campaigns that they’d put on hold.

International Enrollments Begin to Recover

Colleges report a 68 percent surge in new international students enrolled this fall, following steep pandemic-related drops last year. The Open Doors survey also tracks the pandemic’s effect on study abroad.

Recentering the Bright Sheng Debate

A dozen University of Michigan professors argue that the controversy over a blackface Othello is more about teaching preparation than free expression, and that better university training and protocols could have lessened the fallout for everyone involved.

Georgetown Law Sees Surge in Applications

The law school at Georgetown University, which receives more applications than any other law school, saw applications increase by 41...
Opinion

When Will the Library Be Open?

David Banush explores how, with climate change and operational disruptions, answering that question going forward will require embracing an even more diffuse definition of the research library.