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Put Down Your Damn Cell Phones
As educators, it's our job to teach students how to set healthy digital boundaries with their cellphones and other gadgets, argues Jadelin Pikake Felipe.
Not a Popularity Contest
Universities themselves have helped cripple the humanities, the arts and the sciences, argues Harvey Graff.
Seeing the World Through Different Eyes
Racial inequality on campuses plays out in a variety of ways that must be dealt with on many different fronts, says Judith Shapiro.

A Dog's Life
Colin Dayan's With Dogs at the Edge of Life is the work of a mind that slips the leash of genre or narrow specialization at every opportunity, writes Scott McLemee.
Open Access and Academic Freedom
The movement to make scholarly work more accessible has created major benefits, but mandating open access -- and Creative Commons licensing -- restricts authors’ ability to say how, where and by whom their work will be reused, writes Rick Anderson.
BDS and Campus Politics: A Bad Romance
People on campuses should strive to establish a new narrative that emphasizes democratic participation and civil rights, tolerance, and freedom of expression, argues Mark Yudof.
How Racial Preferences in Admissions Will End
In the Fisher v. University of Texas case before the U.S. Supreme Court, the university will lose, argues Roger Clegg.
A 'New Deal' for Athletes
Given how much has changed in college sports, the historical arrangement between universities and players no longer suffices, John Gerdy argues.
Pagination
Pagination
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