The Chronicle of Higher Education
Friday, July 25, 2008
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Sen. Grassley Speaks on Conflicts and Endowments

Sen. Charles E. Grassley, in an exclusive interview, says universities need to better police their scientists for financial conflicts and spend more endowment money on student financial aid

The Chronicle Review

article illustration Bodies of Knowledge

In online education, students and professors can lose important connections to each other, writes Suzanne M. Kelly.
(Illustration by Timothy Cook)

Brainstorm: Lives of the Mind

Mark Bauerlein
A Lesson in Promotion
Poor de Man couldn't write a book.

John L. Jackson Jr.
CNN Presents ... Black America
What are we to make of a cable news channel's rendition of contemporary black life?

article illustration 2 American Students Open a Dark Window on Human Trafficking

Tracy O'Dowd (right), a graduate student at Dominican U. and an intern with an Ecuadorean foundation that fights human trafficking, talks with a woman who blames the group for the arrest of her husband after he was accused of sexually abusing one of their daughters. (Photograph by Mike Ceaser)

Chronicle Blogs

Discussion Forums

Brown Bag

The Brown Bag: Read a transcript of an online discussion with Alan Contreras, a higher-education official in Oregon and longtime critic of the ease with which diploma mills operate in the United States, about whether much has changed in the four years since The Chronicle published a long report on the booming industry in spurious degrees, and what, if anything, is to be done.

Brown Bag

The Brown Bag: Barbara A. Lee, an expert in higher-education law and a professor at Rutgers University at New Brunswick, will answer questions and share strategies for navigating difficult classroom conversations and controversial topics while teaching, without landing yourself — or your institution — in a lawsuit. Join us for a live online chat, on Thursday, August 21, at 12 noon, U.S. Eastern time.

Also of Interest

Balancing Life and Work?

Join the free and free-wheeling conversation in Balancing Act, one of our most popular forums, where thousands of academics gather every day to share advice with each other on work, life, and parenting. Post a question or offer your opinions there or in more than a dozen other forums on topics such as personal finance and teaching.

The Chronicle of Philanthropy

Giving's Tough Climate
Charitable donations in 2007 rose just 1 percent over the previous year, Giving USA reports, and many charity officials believe 2008 will prove even tougher.

Arts & Letters Daily

A guide to some of the best writing on the Web.

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First Person

Sick of mediocre students and feeling stuck on the job, a professor turns to music to self-medicate.

First Person

If we had to make up a story for why you might be interested in our position, then interviewing you was too risky.

On Hiring

When Fortune Smiles
What advice would you offer a candidate who has to decide between competing offers?

Baylor Fires its President
Citing widespread unrest among faculty members and alumni, Baylor University's regents fired the president.

Employer Profiles In-depth information for job candidates, provided by employers.

Sections

The Faculty

THE PROFS THEY ARE A-CHANGIN'

Will the retirement of aging baby boomers usher in an era of moderate politics on campus? more...

Research & Books

LIGHTS OUT FOR CANADIAN OBSERVATORY

The University of Toronto has closed a historic astronomy laboratory despite protests from researchers. more...

Government & Politics

ANOTHER GENERATION HOME FROM WAR

The new GI Bill goes into effect next year. It's very different in scope and purpose from the 1944 bill, which some historians say did not equalize education as much as most people think. more...

Money & Management

NO GROWTH FOR GROWTH'S SAKE

Clemson University bucks the trend among big universities to expand in any direction in search of more revenue, instead staying true to its agricultural roots. more...

Information Technology

STUDENTS UNDER WATCH

Online-education institutions are trying new technologies to ensure that the people enrolled in their courses are the ones doing the work. more...


Students

ANOTHER GENERATION HOME FROM WAR

The new GI Bill goes into effect next year. It's very different in scope and purpose from the 1944 bill, which some historians say did not equalize education as much as most people think. more...

International

SHIFTING SANDS IN THE MIDDLE EAST

Two campuses in the United Arab Emirates, one successful and one not, offer examples and warnings to American institutions on setting up branches abroad. more...

Commentary

GENDER IMBALANCE ON CAMPUSES

As more colleges approach a 60-40 ratio of women to men, Richard Whitmire writes, the effects on friendships and romantic relationships could be devastating. more...

The Chronicle Review

LIFE AS WE KNOW IT

Do huge databases on living organisms encourage or obstruct our fundamental appreciation of them? asks Randy Malamud. more...