Student Unrest
Arrests at Columbia Protests May Signal a Shift in the Campus-Activism Playbook, Experts Say
The arrests on Thursday of more than 100 seemingly peaceful protesters have set a new precedent. What’s next?
The Latest
-
The Review | Opinion
DEI Statements Are Not About Ideology. They’re About Accountability.
-
Policy Overhaul
Colleges, the Title IX Changes Are Finally Here. What’s in Them?
More Stories
-
'A Real Sense of Panic'
How the FAFSA Crisis Has Stranded the Most Vulnerable College Applicants
-
Another summons
4 Things to Know About Today’s Antisemitism Hearing
-
Free-Speech Face-Off
A Tenured Professor Was Removed From the Classroom Over a Pro-Palestine Essay
Special Report
The Trends Report 2024
Our annual investigation into the most consequential developments in higher education. We hope the report will help you understand the forces shaping higher ed, what’s behind them, and how to meet this moment.
-
The Rise of the Faculty Budget Activists
They have proposals to stave off cuts. Is anyone listening? -
Is Inclusion Possible on Campus Today?
College leaders struggle to deliver on a core ideal. -
Colleges’ Top Lawyers, Never More Powerful
The general counsel has vast influence. Is that a good thing? -
A Campus Where Everyone Is Just Like You
More colleges make an identity-based pitch: You are safe here. -
AI Will Shake Up Higher Ed. Are Colleges Ready?
The technology could challenge efforts to prove colleges’ value. -
3 Other Emerging Trends We’re Watching
Debates on free speech, legacy admits, and mega donors.
The Public-Perception Puzzle
-
Why It’s So Hard to Get People Back in College Once They’ve Quit
For many of America’s 40 million college dropouts, the reasons not to return are obvious. -
What’s Really Behind the View That Higher Ed Isn’t Worth It?
Yes, the sector has a lot that it needs to fix. But criticisms that seem to dismiss the value of college altogether often miss key details. -
Do You Know What the Public Really Thinks of College?
Last summer The Chronicle polled the population about how colleges serve students and society, and more than 1,000 American adults answered. In this quiz, see if you can guess what they said. -
The Public-Perception Puzzle
A series by The Chronicle to examine higher ed’s public-perception problem — and the solutions to it.
Featured Newsletters
The Review
What Erwin Chemerinsky makes of the recent fracas.
April 15, 2024
Latitudes
A look at Canada’s visa-cap plan, plus what’s behind China’s rise in global university rankings.
April 10, 2024
Your Career
What to expect in a “serving at the pleasure of” administrative position.
April 15, 2024
ADVERTISEMENT
Virtual Events
-
AI and Personalized Learning
UPCOMING: May 8, 2024 | 2 p.m. ET. AI can foster learning by helping students move at their own pace and in their own way. Join us to discuss how to support faculty experiments that avoid AI pitfalls. With Support From VitalSource. Register here. -
Making Sure Students Are Prepared for College
UPCOMING: May 2, 2024 | 2 p.m. ET. Colleges are creating summer programs to help students beyond their coursework. Join us to discuss what colleges can do to support student success, at college and beyond. With Support From Acuity Insights. Register here. -
Building the Rural Work Force
UPCOMING: May 1, 2024 | 2 p.m. ET. The most desirable small-town employers often require technical training in manufacturing, health care, engineering, or agriculture. Learn how rural colleges can team up with them to develop an ideal work force. With Support From Ascendium. Register here. -
Preventing Faculty Burnout
UPCOMING: April 24, 2024 | 2 p.m. ET. A recent Chronicle survey found differing views of burnout between faculty members and administrators. Join us to learn how colleges can help prevent it. With Support From NCFDD. Register here.
ADVERTISEMENT
Professional-Development Resources
-
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
-
‘Get Rid of the Zionists Here’
When a dean becomes the target of student protesters. -
The New York Intellectuals Were a Boys’ Club
Their machismo masked anxiety and insecurity. -
‘I Cannot Even Buy a Used Car’: Readers Weigh In on Higher Ed’s Compensation Practices
Stagnant salaries, opaque raise processes, and other indignities. -
Letters to the Editor
Read the latest letters to the editor about our articles and about topics we have covered.
ADVERTISEMENT
Data
-
How Much Has Faculty Pay Changed Over Time?
See the latest federal data on compensation for all ranks of the profession at thousands of American colleges. -
Oh, the Places They Went: Where More Than 5 Million American Students Went on Study Abroad This Century
More than 100 countries hosted at least one American student every year, but Britain, Italy, and Spain were perennial favorite destinations, according to an analysis of decades of data. -
Here Are 5 Things to Know About the Class of 2024
A data snapshot highlights trends in graduates’ wages and employment, among other factors.
ADVERTISEMENT
Advice
-
Are We Asking the Wrong Questions About ChatGPT?
Stop agonizing about your syllabus policy and start helping students use AI to extend, not replace, their thinking. -
Ask the Chair: ‘When Did I Become a Bureaucrat?’
A new department head wonders if your scholarly reputation suffers merely by accepting that leadership role. -
Admin 101: How to Accept ‘No’ for an Answer
As an administrator, you will refuse plenty of requests. But part of the job is knowing how to be professional when your own ideas are spurned. -
Associate Professors and the ‘Second Book Problem’
How a new writers institute aims to help faculty members complete book two and earn promotion. -
What to Expect in a ‘Serving at the Pleasure of’ Post
A look at the benefits and risks of “at will” positions in campus administration. -
Leadership Burnout: How to Restore Your Depleted Bandwidth
Three ways to deal with a to-do list that seems too lengthy for one administrator to realistically accomplish.