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A graduation cap with the words "Financial Aid" sits atop a pile of $100 bills.

There’s a Better Way to Apply for Student Aid

The new FAFSA’s troubled rollout raises questions about both the form and process, Jim Blew and Art Hauptman write.

Four students of various ethnicities gather in a classroom, a woman gesturing as she explains something and two seated male students and one standing male student look on.

5 Strategies for Better Supporting Multilingual Learners

At community colleges and four-year institutions, faculty and staff members should take steps to help English language learners develop a sense of belonging that builds on their strengths to promote success.

A frontal view of the U.S. Supreme Court building, with its eight columns.

Before the Court

The Supreme Court looms large in this spring’s university press releases, Scott McLemee writes.

Two people hold a placard with photos of people killed during the Oct. 7 Hamas attack.

My Colleagues Stayed Silent When Oct. 7 Was Called a ‘Beautiful Day’

Deborah Gerhardt reflects on a UNC faculty body’s decision not to weigh in on a guest speaker’s comments.

A dictionary entry for the word "wisdom." Though the full definition is not visible, words that are visible include "knowledge" and "experience."

‘Wisdom Skills’ Are Hard to Teach—AI Can Help

AI-assisted educational games can expand experiential learning opportunities at scale, Tim Dasey writes.

The word "expertise" in white against a blue background. Visible items in the background include a pair of glasses, a calculator, a pen and charts/graphs.

Legitimating Expertise

Rebuilding public trust in expertise starts with us, says Julia M. Wright.

A graphic featuring a red arrow moving in a downward direction atop the word "BUDGET."

‘Colleges on the Brink’

Broken budgets, not hostile takeovers, are the biggest challenge for most presidents, Michael T. Nietzel and Charles M. Ambrose write.

A pencil lies atop a score sheet with multiple choice bubbles for a standardized test.

The Misguided War on Test Optional

Akil Bello argues defenders of test requirements attack student choice and institutional priority setting.