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Rethinking Awards Processes
Annmarie Caño suggests systemic changes to awards and recognition processes to make them more inclusive and less prone to bias.

A New Attitude: Why McMahon Isn’t DeVos 2.0
Daniel A. Collier writes that Linda McMahon’s approach as secretary of education may not mirror that of Betsy DeVos.

To Use AI or Not to Use AI? A Student’s Burden
In shifting much of the responsibility for upholding academic integrity from instructors to students, we leave students with an unfair burden, Daniel Cryer writes.

Some Things Never Change
You know there’s something wrong when the proportion of low-income students at elite colleges has barely changed over a century, Jim Jump writes.

Spring Ahead
Social trust is fraying, zombie bugs are on the loose and human ingenuity never fails to surprise—Scott McLemee rounds up select forthcoming titles from university presses.

A Better Metaphor: The Student as Client
Keith B. Murray argues that thinking of students as customers gets the professor’s role all wrong.

The Terrifying Meekness of Administrators
Ezra Levinson writes that college leaders do not seem prepared to protect students like her during a second Trump administration.

Dear Prospective UAGC Students: Stay Away
Nolan L. Cabrera offers a word of warning for prospective University of Arizona Global Campus students.
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