UNC-Chapel Hill Got Off Easy
If there’s one thing journalism schools should know by now, it is not to hire professors based on their DEI credibility, as such moves will likely lead to conflict. But…
If there’s one thing journalism schools should know by now, it is not to hire professors based on their DEI credibility, as such moves will likely lead to conflict. But…
…issues but just “the first word” toward further, open-ended debate—and toward which I hope this exchange between Leef and me will further prime the pump. I would give Leef’s review…
…students who just had outstanding academic records. In one instance, Starkman was told that a low-income student who had excellent test scores should only be ranked a “3” (that is,…
…test, that means that their students will get more or less the slanted message the standards convey—and nothing else. Second, it makes the job of the college history professor who…
…he believes it should be, the federal government must be the one to require it. Neal McCluskey challenged that assumption. He argued, first, that markets set standards; they will not…
…recent years, I will say that I do not know, but that I hypothesize that high state minimum-wage laws are to blame. I will then explain that the first way…
…third factor—will my degree get me a job and how much will it pay? Yet, ironically, universities arguably have a comparative advantage only with respect to the first two factors…
…FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid) form, colleges have information that may work against you. In a study on price discrimination in college tuition at one private university, Robert A….
…since the promise of loan forgiveness for high-balance borrowers will fall on the federal government’s shoulders. Barring Congressional action, the release of the new Scorecard data will also allow the…
…examining e-mails is very outrageous,” Adams said. “It is distressing that they will not respond to my requests but they will grant [the Fullers’] requests.” Greg Lukianoff, director of legal…