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Who Is the 'Public' in Higher Education Today?
There are many potential hazards when the public good is narrowly constrained to the interests of the nation-state, and academe is not immune from such isolationist tendencies, writes Jenny J. Lee.

Applying to College as a Wheelchair User
Why was finding a college so difficult, asks Valerie Piro, even though all I needed was basic wheelchair access and a dorm room large enough for my physical therapy equipment?

Online Education: What I Got Wrong
Economist James D. Miller now thinks online education could increase demand for instructors, not destroy their jobs.

Isn’t It Pragmatic?
Michael Roth explores how and why Indian students are embracing liberal arts education.

Democracy Is in the Streets
A scholarly framework and documentary format coincide in The Activists, writes Scott McLemee, which depicts the antiwar movement in this century’s first decade as an assemblage of collaborating but distinct groups.

Art History’s Image Problem
The current administration’s stream of visual foibles is just one example of why policy makers and others should question their assumptions about the value of studying art history, argues Nika Elder.

Democratizing the Great Books
At a time when many of the values that underpin our democracy are under threat, educators of whatever political disposition should introduce students to the history of ideas that have shaped our contemporary world, write Casey N. Blake, Roosevelt Montás and Tamara Mann Tweel.

The Creativity Boom
David Galef describes, with tongue in cheek, the courses that today's students should take to be in the know.
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