Embarrassed by the scandals, UNC-Chapel Hill students still love their school.
Embarrassed by the scandals, UNC-Chapel Hill students still love their school.
Embarrassed by the scandals, UNC-Chapel Hill students still love their school.
I take a look at three reform-minded athletics reports and find a few (very few) good ideas.
Students today design their own curricula, for good or ill.
Admitting athletes who aren’t prepared for college work is a recipe for cheating.
UNC-Chapel Hill’s freshman summer reading program continues the school’s fixation with rape activism.
Still waiting for a decision in Fisher v. University of Texas, Ed Blum hunts for more plaintiffs.
In the Pope Center’s latest report, Jay Schalin, director of policy analysis, says that North Carolina State University’s general education program is “deeply flawed” because students can select from courses that are “too narrow,” “trivial,” and often “inspired by political correctness.”
The system’s new website sets the stage for transparency, but the information is missing.
One year after a complaint to the federal government, UNC-Chapel Hill is spending big to prevent the next one.
Should student fees pay for sex counselors and improvisational theater?