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3-D rendering of the open door and cloud. Decisions and choices concept. Blue colors. Minimal design.

Beyond Work-Life Balance: The Future of Career Services Lies in Career and Life Integration

Career centers must evolve into hubs of lifelong guidance, personal development and future readiness, writes Hassan Akmal of UC San Diego. College leaders must embrace five strategic imperatives to lead this transformation.

An image of the U.S. Capitol building at night.

Presidents Are Staying Busy, Not Silent

Just because presidents may not be speaking out, that doesn’t mean they aren’t advocating for the sector and their students behind the scenes, Mary Dana Hinton writes.

Three wooden alphabet blocks of different colors spell the acronym "DEI."

The Deadline That Wasn’t

Higher ed botched its response to the anti-DEI Dear Colleague letter, Steve Robinson writes.

A hand holds up a hanging sign that says, in blue, "Closed."

Lessons Learned From a College Closure

In part three of a three-part series, former senior leaders at Cabrini University offer advice for navigating a closure, including ideas for how neighboring institutions can help—and not hurt.

A close-up of rows of numbers on a statistical table.

Ed Data Goes Dark: Why It Matters

Cuts to the Institute of Education Sciences are part of an authoritarian playbook, Robert Ubell writes.

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Free Speech Matters. So Does DEI.

Students can’t speak and debate freely without inclusion and belonging, Michael S. Roth writes.

An open gate to Harvard University's campus with three students walking through it.
Opinion

What If 2% of a Harvard Gift Went to an HBCU?

With higher ed facing a hostile political climate, rich colleges should share their wealth with needier institutions, Eric Weinberger writes.

The acronym "DEI" in large black 3-D letters next to a judge's gavel.

Anti-DEI Rhetoric Does Not Equal Legal Reality

The anti-DEI movement sounds like a row of cannons, but its legal attack is a rifle shot based on one provision of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Dan Currell writes.