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Most Popular Stories of 2016

Reading couple statue at U. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Whether you regard 2016 as a kidney stone of a year, an annus mirabilis of champagne and caviar, or something in between, your tireless scribes at The Chronicle have been there to record it all and bring you insights into what it all means. Here are the 10 articles that drew the greatest readership in the year just ending. Happy holidays, and happy reading.

Advice
Four quick ways to shift students’ attention from life’s distractions to your course content.
News
Christine Ortiz, a dean of graduate education, envisions a new kind of college, built from scratch for today’s needs and with today’s technology.
News
Allison Goldblatt and her family believed that her elite status as a swimmer would pay her way at the college of her choice. But they found out the truth.
Balancing Act
By Emily Van Duyne
Why women in academe feel our bodies are “always under watch.”
From the Archives
Marc Edwards, a professor of civil engineering at Virginia Tech, has become something of a folk hero for his role in identifying lead in the city’s water. But he says he takes no pleasure in the attention. Instead he worries that university research is “no longer deserving of the public trust.”
The Review
By Scott Newstok
Twenty-first-century students would benefit from 16th-century habits of mind.
The Chronicle Review
Nascent terrorists seem to be drawn to engineering. Their education may further radicalize them.
First Person
By Carl Cederström, Michael Marinetto
Four steps toward an alternative academic career.
The Review
By Tracey Moore
As technology and machines consume more and more of life, perhaps theater can help us remember what it means to act like a human being.