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Debias Yourself to Debias Your Teaching
Anne Gordon explores how implicit bias plays out in the ways law school professors, as well as those in other disciplines, engage with students -- and what can be done to mitigate it.

Another Pandemic
Zhenyu Yuan captures in poetry the experience of being Chinese in the time of COVID-19.
Acknowledge—and Act
American higher education has failed Native American students again and again, and colleges and universities must critically examine their campuses and curricula, argues James A. Bryant Jr.
Connecting the Dots: Scaling Remediation Reform to Promote Equitable Transfer Student Success
For the 80 percent of students who begin at a community college with the intention of earning at least a bachelor’s degree, their chances of success are shaped from the moment they begin their educational journey.

A Focus on Critical Feeling
More critical thinking alone isn’t an antidote to the manipulation of their emotions many Americans have experienced during the last several years, argues Michael S. Roth.

Institutional Approaches to Mentoring Faculty Colleagues
To build an inclusive climate for faculty, colleges should develop formal programs for mentoring rather than just leave it to individuals, write Joya Misra, Ember Skye Kanelee and Ethel L. Mickey.
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