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Moving Toward Engaged Pluralism on the College Campus
Despite the efforts of many people in higher education, student experiences reflect and reinforce broader patterns of inequality, write Elizabeth Bradley and Candice M. Lowe Swift, who describe a large-scale and ongoing approach to help meet that challenge.

Ethical College Admissions: Truth, Whole Truth and Nothing but Truth
Should colleges require applicants to submit every SAT and ACT score they have earned? Jim Jump considers the issues.

A Friend at the Front of the Room
Faculty members need to get more involved in helping students with mental health challenges, write engineering professors and deans Steven W. McLaughlin, Alec D. Gallimore and Robert D. Braun.

Recognizing the Shortcomings of Resilience
Difficulties surmounting certain obstacles could, in fact, be indicators that a student should abandon a particular path and pursue something else, writes Danielle Carr Ramdath.

The Reality of State Disinvestment in Public Higher Education
Recent studies have produced an avalanche of questionable statistics, argues F. King Alexander, to the effect that public institutions do not warrant greater taxpayer support.

The Mind-Blowing Hypocrisy of Elite College Admissions
Varsity Blues has exposed just how bad it is, writes Ryan Craig.

Another Thing the Book Burning at Georgia Southern Reveals
The events are partly the consequence of expectations that the delivery of “diverse” content will by itself engineer more equitable and inclusive campus communities, argues David Shih.

2020 Vision
Scott McLemee surveys upcoming university press books that, in anticipation of the coming year's presidential campaigns, focus on the White House or the road to it.
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