The scandal may affect Ph.D.s seeking nonacademic careers; 2 students sue colleges tainted by scandal; a fresh look at teaching evaluations; and more.
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Advice
By Sarah Rose Cavanagh
 

Stimulate your students’ curiosity — and help them learn — using the tried-and-true techniques in this comprehensive guide.

Teaching
 

A professor shares the benefits of reading his course evaluations in curated form.  

Admissions
By Lindsay Ellis
 

They say their applications to universities named in the unfolding scandal weren’t fairly evaluated in a system “warped and rigged by fraud.”

 

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Graduate Students
By Dan Bauman
 

Harvard, Michigan, Rice, and other universities subscribe to the popular career resource for graduate students. Now, with the foundation’s leader indicted, the service’s future is uncertain.

Admissions & Student Aid
 

Dozens of people, including famous actors, college coaches, and a university administrator, have been charged by federal prosecutors for their alleged roles in an admissions-bribery scheme involving Yale, Stanford, and other elite institutions.

Data
The Chronicle List
 

At some colleges, students take being taught by tenured or tenure-track professors for granted. At other colleges, that seldom happens. PREMIUM

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A New Resource for Chronicle Readers

 

The job of the provost is changing. For those new to the post, or who aspire to it, our latest Starter Kit examines how, more than ever, the job is about consensus building, innovation, and managing change. Buy a copy in the Chronicle Store.

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Advice
By James M. Lang
 

Apps are training all of us to expect ease in life. But cognitive research shows that the hardest study habits are the most effective.

 

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Paid for and Created by Griffith University
 

A series of games and tests helps detect children who are struggling, guiding them to counseling and helping them succeed.

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