Students By Beth McMurtrie A student-success expert shares seven principles that underlie the university’s high-tech, high-touch approach. |
Special Reports Campus leaders are under pressure to modernize the educational experience, using technology and learning science to improve results. Our new report on the future of learning can help you innovate. Buy a copy in the Chronicle Store. |
International By Karin Fischer Lehigh University’s Morgan Volkart focused on new countries in Latin America and Africa this year, and the resulting group of international freshmen will be more diverse than ever. |
International By Karin Fischer The president and his policies are threatening international student numbers — and colleges’ bottom line. One admissions officer took to the road to try to stop the decline. |
Sexual Misconduct By Nell Gluckman The Latin American Studies Association announced the creation of an anti-harassment task force at its annual meeting last week. |
Faculty By Katherine Mangan A professor at San Diego State University was taken aback when a message from the provost warned him that he might be “showered with unending curse” and “visited by evil a million fold.” |
Academic Freedom By Nell Gluckman The Associated Press found that the conservative fund laid out 47 percent more in 2016. |
In a few months the chair of your department will step down. You want the job. But are you ready? To help you prepare, we’ve collected lessons and advice from experienced department heads on how to make the transition from faculty member to chair, and how to succeed in that role. Buy a copy of “Starter Kit: New to the Department Chair” in the Chronicle Store, and check out the rest of our new Starter Kit series. |
Commentary By Brian Rosenberg Despite fashionable opinion to the contrary, 21st-century administrators are crucial to the smooth running of a college. |
The Graduate Adviser By Leonard Cassuto The goal of a good intro is to orient the audience and offer a confident sense of what’s to come. |
Lingua Franca William Germano considers how language can reconfigure what we mean when we look at the world. |