Literary Theory Is Cocooned from Criticism
The philosophy in some literary circles has become so circular that criticism cannot be responded to with anything but moral condemnation. On Quillette.
The philosophy in some literary circles has become so circular that criticism cannot be responded to with anything but moral condemnation. On Quillette.
After detaining a student for passing out anti-capitalist flyers, the college will pay $30,000 in damages and revise its free speech codes. On Patch.
An administrator warned a student that speaking to the media could be deemed interference, limiting the student's civil liberties. On Inside Higher Ed.
A finance office at NC Central University accused the new chancellor of trying to send a contract to a favored vendor and buying a $70,000 SUV with state funds. On WRAL.
Latinos gaining a college credential has increased almost 10 percent since 2007, but black adults have only increased 6 percent. On the Center for American Progress.
Black students carry 68 percent more debt from college than white students, leaving a wealth gap even as the number of black graduates increases. On Reuters.
Holding tuition flat has also meant bringing in more non-Indiana students and not raising funding levels for professors. On Inside Higher Ed.
The "indefinite" occupation of a student center ended within 40 hours after calls to parents were made warning them of the financial aid penalties associated with a suspension or other discipline. On National Review.
Seeing a revenue boost in offering boot camps, colleges are pulling in tech workers who want to update their skills and non-students trying to jump into the IT world. On the Chronicle of Higher Education.
Though supporters argue it can aid "stranded workers," many detractors of the online idea say it duplicates what already exists and doesn't amount to much concrete action yet. On EdSource.