Academe Today Thursday, November 9, 2017 Sign up for this newsletter | Todayâs News Faith By Liam Adams Since the election of President Trump, the religious leaders have faced pressure to deal with Islamophobia. | Teaching By Nell Gluckman Staff members of the university’s student newspaper were surprised to discover that they had been explicitly barred from the class. |
Finance By Adam Harris The latest revelation in The New York Times’ “Paradise Papers” series, based on documents from a Bermuda-based law firm, is about how major investors, including colleges, skirt federal taxes. |
Faculty By Chris Quintana In navigating the ivory tower, tattooed professors face attitudes old and new. |
Government By Brock Read Quinnipiac University’s polling institute seemed to be out on a limb with its predictions in key gubernatorial races. Then the results rolled in. |
Students By Andy Thomason “I talked to him a lot about my dissertation research,” one Ph.D. student said. |
In Brief Exclusively for Subscribers In a new feature, available to individual subscribers only, The Chronicle offers carefully curated collections of articles on important issues in higher education. So far, there are more than 25. Here are a couple of examples: |
Cheating has become increasingly complex, with students in the United States going online to find surrogates in other countries to do their work for them. This collection of nine articles prepares educators for new challenges in stemming a tide of deception. |
In 10 articles, Steven Pinker and other experts offer advice that will make your academic prose less cumbersome and perhaps even a joy to read. |
Views Commentary By Jeffrey J. Selingo Through technology, multiple institutions can link together to deliver essential services at a discount. | Lingua Franca Ben Yagoda says Geoffrey Pullum and him agree that English grammar allows you to use an accusative as part of the subject of a sentence. |
Paid for and Created by International Baccalaureate Chicago Public School Students Succeed A recent study by the University of Chicago found that graduates of IB programs were more likely to enroll and succeed in selective universities. |
Advice First Person By Jonathan Rees If the good ship Academic Freedom sinks under the weight of Twitter attacks on controversial profs, we will all drown. |
Page Proof By Rachel Toor To get published now, your book must be well written. So why are new faculty members still producing deadly dull monographs? |
Job Opportunities Assistant Professor of Ceramics, University of Oklahoma Oklahoma, United States Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, Carlow University Pennsylvania, United States Director of Global Studies Program, Vanderbilt University Tennessee, United States AP Readers, Educational Testing Service New Jersey, United States Deputy CIO and Director of Technical Services, The University of Mississippi Mississippi, United States Assistant Professor of Computer Science / Science Education, Western Washington University Washington, United States Japanese Language Lectureship, Department of East Asian Studies, Arts and science, New York University, New York University Arts and Science New York, United States Economics - Assistant Professor, St. Lawrence University New York, United States President, Kalamazoo Valley Community College Michigan, United States Assistant Professor of Psychology, St. Lawrence University New York, United States
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