Policy and Free Speech
A Professor Started His Class at a Pro-Palestinian Demonstration. It Ended With Him in a Police Car.
Pomona College officials say the faculty member was arrested after refusing to turn down loud music and identify himself. He says he was targeted.
The Latest
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Gone Missing
The Fulbright Program Is Quietly Burying Its History
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The Review | Opinion
Trust in Higher Ed Was Low. It Just Got Lower.
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The Review | Opinion
This Is a Golden Age of Academic Unionization
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Where Will Tomorrow's Students Come From?
Hispanics Want to Enroll in College, but They Don’t Know How to Get There
More Stories
The Public-Perception Puzzle
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Where the Public Sees Value in Higher Ed
The Chronicle asked more than a thousand adults how well colleges serve students and society. Explore the data to find points of confidence and doubt, consensus and divergence. -
How Should College Presidents Speak About the Unspeakable?
Some have struggled to find the right words on the Israel-Hamas conflict. Others have opted not to speak at all. -
How Much Should You Borrow for a College Education?
Results from a national survey, commissioned by The Chronicle, offer a peek into how everyday Americans think about student debt. -
The Public-Perception Puzzle
A series by The Chronicle to examine higher ed’s public-perception problem — and the solutions to it.
Featured Newsletters
Race on Campus
Plenty of obstacles confront students of color. Where should colleges start?
November 21, 2023
Your Career
What a chair should consider in helping the faculty cope with a colleague’s unexpected death.
November 27, 2023
The Review
Plus: On a significant burlesque.
November 27, 2023
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Virtual Events
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Supporting Student Success: Staff and Roles
UPCOMING: December 5, 2023 | 2 p.m. ET: Colleges prioritize student success through advising programs and performance-tracking systems, but staff burnout and turnover present a challenge. Join us to discuss it. With Support From Mongoose. Register here. -
Starting a Program for Incarcerated Students
UPCOMING: December 6, 2023 | 2 p.m. ET: With new federal aid available for students in prisons to take courses for credit, many colleges are now interested in starting or expanding programs for those students. Join us for advice on what it takes to do so. With Support From Ascendium. Register here. -
Data Science Unbound
UPCOMING: December 7, 2023 | 2 p.m. ET: Student demand for data science in the liberal arts continues to rise. A panel of experts will explore the trend and the challenges it presents, including issues of faculty shortages and course sharing. With Support From Microsoft. Register here. -
Chronicle Festival — Ideas Shaping Higher Ed
ON DEMAND: How can colleges embrace new partnerships and approaches, put students at the center, and deliver on the value of a degree? Watch this year’s festival on demand and hear from top thinkers and leaders about ideas that will reshape colleges. Watch on demand.
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Professional-Development Resources
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Professional-Development Resources
Visit The Chronicle’s professional-development resources page to read stories from Chronicle journalists and contributors, and to explore videos and research briefs on a variety of topics. -
The Chair’s Role in the Continuing Pandemic
George Justice discusses how department chairs are continuing to deal with Covid on campus, and how they’re dealing with the added pressures of leading through the pandemic. Video provided by Dever Justice LLC. -
Managing Up
Carolyn Dever tackles how managing up is a challenge for all department chairs, and how to navigate these difficulties, providing pro tips on how to approach your dean or provost. Video provided by Dever Justice LLC. -
Seven Practices for Building Community and Student Belonging Virtually
Most colleges have traditionally provided in-person programming and supports to strengthen bonds between students and build community. This research brief was originally published by Ithaka S+R.
The Review
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Stop Scolding Student Protesters
Accusations of immorality miss the point. -
Humanities on the Cutting-Room Floor
This is what it looks like when a college prioritizes graduation rates. -
Scholars Who Study the Middle East Are Afraid to Speak Out
Polling data indicate widespread self-censorship. -
Letters to the Editor
Read the latest letters to the editor about our articles and about topics we have covered.
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Data
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How Do Humanities Majors Fare in the Work Force?
While the worth of a humanities degree has been called into question in recent years, a new state-by-state analysis shows its earning power is stronger than what many people think, with an unemployment rate similar to graduates in other fields. -
State Support for Public Colleges, 2002-21
Explore how state and federal support has declined as a share of overall revenue — putting a greater burden on students — at more than 1,500 public colleges and universities between 2002 and 2021. -
Recruiting for Cybersecurity Programs
ON DEMAND: Job openings in the field have grown by 350 percent in the last decade. Join experts to discuss programs colleges can create on evolving threats and specialized areas. With Support From ACI Learning. Watch on demand
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Advice
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Ask the Chair: ‘Is It Really My Job to Find My Replacement?’
What to do when no one in the department is stepping up to replace you as chair. -
Presidents Don’t Talk About Their Panic Attacks
Advice for leaders and boards about how to deal with the increasing stress of campus leadership positions. -
How to Make Your Teaching More Inclusive
This comprehensive guide offers a road map to make sure your classroom interactions and course design reach all students, not just some of them. -
The Provost Files: When to Steal Good National Ideas
A key dilemma for new leaders is figuring out which local practices to protect and which to jettison. -
Admin 101: Does What You Do Matter?
Five ways for academic administrators to make sure they are paying attention to work that matters. -
Adventures in Substack
How to get started writing and publishing your own academic newsletter.
Special Report
Package
The Trends Report 2023
If anyone still thought we could gaze, soothsayer-like, into the future in order to meet it fully prepared, Covid-19 humbled us.
But we can try to understand the forces shaping higher ed, what’s behind them, and how we can meet this moment effectively.
We hope this annual issue will help you do just that.
But we can try to understand the forces shaping higher ed, what’s behind them, and how we can meet this moment effectively.
We hope this annual issue will help you do just that.
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You Didn’t Apply, but We Admitted You Anyway
New experiments are short-circuiting admissions. Here’s why they matter. -
Students Demand Endless Flexibility
But is it what they need? There are limits to how much faculty members can bend. -
Flagships Prosper While Regionals Wither
The gap is widening. Who wants to attend a hollowed-out college or university? -
Everyone Is Talking About ‘Belonging’
But what does it really mean? A sense of belonging is elusive. -
The Climate-Conscious College
Curricula are being updated to inspire action, not just fear. -
Other Developments to Watch
Here are some other higher-ed trends we’re tracking.