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The Review | Essay
This organization no longer knows what it stands for.

Latest News

'Unrelentingly Sad'
The former University of Michigan leader’s failed move to Florida has taken on unmistakable political significance for higher education.
Seeking precedent
More than 600 colleges qualify for the money. Conservatives say it incentivizes discriminatory recruitment practices.

Latest Opinion

Trackers: Keep Up With the Latest

The Chronicle is tracking executive orders, statements from Trump, and agency actions that affect higher education, plus legal challenges directed at those measures. Here’s the latest.
We’ve documented actions taken to alter or eliminate jobs, offices, hiring practices, and programs amid pressure to end identity-conscious recruitment and retention of minority staff and students.
Legislators want to get rid of diversity, equity, and inclusion offices, end diversity trainings, banish diversity statements, and censor how professors talk about race, gender, and sexuality in mandatory courses.

The Daily Briefing: How Subscribers Start Their Day

Daily Briefing
Can research institutions wriggle out of overhead caps? U. of Arizona touts balanced budget. Can NIL clearinghouse hold up? And more.
By Rick Seltzer June 16, 2025
Daily Briefing
Threat to colleges’ tax exemptions. Lawsuit challenges HSIs. A battle to buy Wells College, and more.
By Rick Seltzer June 13, 2025
Daily Briefing
Another Harvard investigation? Fulbright board members walk out. Judge opens the door to Khalil’s release, and more.
By Rick Seltzer June 12, 2025
Daily Briefing
Former presidents pan Big, Beautiful Bill. Senators nix Virginia board appointments. Private equity primed for college sports. And more.
By Rick Seltzer June 11, 2025
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Great Read

Rediscover timeless and popular stories from our archive, handpicked by Chronicle editors.
Commentary
Call it “Vision for Excellence,” involve all campus constituencies, and issue a flurry of news releases. Better yet, skip it.
Advice
Perhaps the ugliest side of professors is the conviction that specialized knowledge about a few narrow subjects confers intellectual and moral authority on matters about which one knows almost nothing.
Advice
I’ve been teaching for about 10 years now, and, of course, I was a student for 20 years before that. So I have some experience observing my students’ sins, and perhaps even more experience committing them. The sins that I see in the everyday life of the typical college student are not great ones.…

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Virtual Events

June 25, 2025 | 2:00 PM EDT
UPCOMING: June 25, 2025 | 2 p.m. ET Hiring managers are looking for more than what college graduates know. They want to see how graduates think, learn, connect, adapt, and lead. Hear from experts how higher education can develop students’ durable skills throughout their college journey — from admission to graduation. With Support From Acuity Insights. Register now.
June 17, 2025 | 2:00 PM EDT
UPCOMING: June 17, 2025 | 2 p.m. ET With more employers demanding AI skills, microcredentials in AI might be one way for colleges to engage new students and to better prepare them for the work force. With Support From Coursera. Register now.
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Professional-Development Resources

Visit The Chronicle’s professional-development-resources page to stay up to date on our career-advancement workshop opportunities for higher-ed professionals.
UPCOMING: July 2025. This two-week virtual program is designed to empower librarians to develop their leadership skills, as well as workshops on the topics most pressing for the campus library.
UPCOMING: August 2025. This four-hour workshop, in partnership with Dever Justice LLC, will provide key insights for new and aspiring academic administrators on the inner workings of administrative positions.
UPCOMING: October 2025. This virtual workshop series will provide administrative leaders with the skills to effectively enhance institutional success and navigate shared governance by learning how to make tough decisions, lead with resiliency, and build high-performing teams.

Data

A look at changes in average annual percentages of full-time instructors who were members of specific racial and ethnic groups in 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2023, by degree-granting college.
Explore this searchable, sortable table showing the race, ethnicity, and gender of full-time faculty members at 3,300 colleges and universities since 2018.
No field kept up with inflation, but some are faring better than others.
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Advice

Too many searches, especially in this buyer’s market, fail to woo job candidates with kindness and professionalism.
Too many Ph.D. students still feel compelled to make their career plans in secret.
An acquisitions editor offers eight tips for marketing-shy academics.
How to stand up for academe in this era of constant attacks from federal and state governments.
Prospective students aren’t just looking for academic fit or financial aid — they’re looking for human connection. They’re looking for home.
An Arizona grant program offers a model for how to support academic research that puts the public interest first.