Yes, You Can Teach about Liberty
Faculty members can take innovative paths in designing courses, with new formats and intellectually enriching content.
Liberating Chapel Hill
Cutting UNC’s flagship campus loose from the system will help solve some major problems with little negative impact.
When Racial Preferences Fell at UC
A one-sided book treats California’s experience after Prop. 209 as a disaster, while citing figures that show it was not.
Freshman Composition and the Sonnet
One instructor uses a tool largely unfamiliar to college freshmen, the Shakespearean sonnet.
Just Another Radical Obama Appointee
Duke professor Cathy Davidson, nominated for the National Council on the Humanities, is another in a long line of highly questionable Obama appointees.
Nurturing the Dumbest Generation
The progressive theory pushed in education schools may explain why high school students read easy books.
Remediation: Still a Mystery
A Pope Center review of remedial education in the UNC system reveals that no one knows if it is helping the students who take it.
What a Load
A Texas A&M study of faculty productivity led a reporter to scrutinize a university department at UNC-Chapel Hill.
My Very Costly College Education
A graduate laments piling up $200,000 in student debt in exchange for a sociology degree and an “assumed rite of passage.”
An Accident of Planned Growth
North Carolina’s Research Triangle Park became a model for government economic development efforts—unfortunately, however, a misleading one.