How To Start a College on Your Own Time
A philosophy professor in California felt that something was missing in education and is now creating an ideal learning community.
Does Writing Need a Curriculum?
An ambitious but amorphous program is losing favor, and colleges are trying out other ways of teaching students how to write.
Parents and Students Need to Do Their Homework
It’s wise to examine a college’s financial condition before making a decision about which school to attend.
College: Investment or Vacation?
Does it build human capital—or are students just marching in place?
The Treaty of Chapel Hill
Formalizing the collaboration between the military and the University of North Carolina system makes sense for the entire state (and possibly the whole nation).
Asking the Right Question
Are too many students going to college? Bravo to Chronicle Review for a fair and balanced discussion.
How to Reform from the Ground Up
Fixing higher education won’t come from top-down government mandates, but from grass-roots innovation.
November 9, 1989: Another Stone Wall
The Claremont Colleges commemorate a gay-rights milestone but forget the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Thank You, Professors
With its Spirit of Inquiry Award, the Pope Center honors outstanding faculty at Wake Forest, Duke, and East Carolina University.
Is Academic Freedom All That Fragile?
It’s less imperiled than two law professors think, and competing rights should be considered, too.