Students for Fair Admissions, which alleges that Harvard discriminates against Asian-American applicants, forced the university to reveal the inner workings of its admissions process. But what did all the evidence add up to?
The University of California wants to increase diversity, save money, and protect the state from economic downturns. The key? Enabling more community-college students to successfully leap to four-year programs.
Without some intentional tweaks, two reports argue, liberal-arts departments won’t necessarily equip students to avoid underemployment or help them navigate a work environment increasingly dominated by automation.
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Colleges face growing demands to hire more minority faculty members. But doing so requires revamping how search committees usually operate, confronting unconscious bias, and improving the Ph.D. pipeline. This collection examines how colleges are changing to bolster their faculty ranks with more people from underrepresented minority groups. Get your copy in the Chronicle Store.
Coverage seems to invoke two complementary ideas, the dream of completeness and the desire to be kept safe. They meet, says Bill Germano, in the classroom, where there are no assurances.
Paid for and Created by University at Buffalo A City in Flux The economic, social, and physical landscapes of Buffalo, N.Y., are optimal spaces for experimentation and innovation.
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