The Grade Chase Problem Is a Symptom of Higher Ed’s Box Checking Culture

Every semester, I pose a question to my students: Why are you here? Would you prioritize deep learning, even if it meant a lower grade, or chase the highest grade, even at the cost of true understanding? They almost always claim learning matters most. But I’m growing skeptical that they actually mean it. Those words […]

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What Holds the West Together?

There is a sense, when reading Allen Guelzo and James Hankins’ The Golden Thread: A History of Western Civilization, Volume I: Christianity and the Ancient World, that one is being invited into a conversation that has all but disappeared in our age. For decades, Western civilization courses have been dismantled in schools and universities, replaced […]

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The SAT’s STEM Bias Points to a Larger Crisis in Reading and Writing

Our society has become obsessed with science, engineering math, and technology (STEM)—not only in the name of progress but also because we have deemed reading and writing almost wholly unimportant. According to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the number of humanities bachelor’s degrees awarded to graduating seniors across American universities decreased by approximately […]

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From Campus Rhetoric to Assassination

Editor’s Note: The following is an article originally published by AEI on September 11, 2025. It is crossposted here with permission. Charlie Kirk is dead. The founder of Turning Point USA was fatally shot by a sniper while speaking at Utah Valley University. Authorities are investigating the killing as a politically motivated assassination. For years, Kirk warned that escalating […]

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Je Suis Charlie

Shortly after the brutal murder of Charlie Kirk on a Utah college campus, one of my sons, who lived in France for several years, sent me a photo of a group of protestors holding placards that read, “Je suis Charlie.” Meaning, I am Charlie. The photo was from January 2015, when Islamic terrorists murdered several […]

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French Professor Find Happiness in Being Cancelled

Editor’s Note: The following excerpt is from an article originally published by the Observatory of University Ethics on September 9, 2025. The Observatory translated it into English from French. I have edited it, to the best of my ability, to align with Minding the Campus’s style guidelines. It is crossposted here with permission. In the joy […]

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The Clarity of Tragedy

Watching the Cross, on Calvary, about 3 PM or so, the Roman centurion recognized the truth: “This man truly was the Son of God!” This thought comes to mind watching the coverage of the assassination of Charlie Kirk in the last twenty-four hours. I did not know him, nor was I a follower of his. […]

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Grand Valley State Honors College Focuses on Social Justice to Increase Racial Diversity

Editor’s Note: The following is an article originally published by the College Fix on September 09, 2025. It is crossposted here with permission. Grand Valley State University’s (GVSU) Frederik Meijer Honors College has shifted toward a “social justice” orientation in both its curriculum and admissions in an effort to increase racial diversity, according to emails recently obtained […]

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‘Can Universities Take Anti-Semitism Seriously?’

In response to my recent Martin Center article, “The Emptiness of Antisemitism Studies,” George Leef wrote in National Review and posed the question: “Can American universities take antisemitism seriously?” His framing perfectly captured the larger stakes of the problem. My original piece—later reprinted in Minding the Campus and by the Canadian Institute for Jewish Research—showed […]

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It’s a Big Club, and You Ain’t in It

In Season 5, Episode 7 of Gilmore Girls, Rory Gilmore—ever the ambitious Yale student journalist—follows whispers and cryptic clues to the Life and Death Brigade, a secret society of Yale’s wealthy elite known for their reckless, over-the-top spectacles. Her way in comes through Logan Huntzberger, the heir of a media dynasty and a core member […]

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UMass Amherst and the Eve of 9/11

It’s been 24 years. September 11, 2001, was a Tuesday, but what I recall just as vividly is what happened the day before. The week of September 10-15 was to be “Palestinian Awareness Week” at the University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMass Amherst). Everything changed on Tuesday morning, but on Monday afternoon, we had no idea […]

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Charlie Kirk Fought for an Education That Restores American Faith and Values

Editor’s Note: The following is an article originally published by the National Association of Scholars on September 10, 2025. It is crossposted here with permission. We are appalled at the murder of Charlie Kirk. He was a decent man, a father and husband, a patriot, a Christian, and a force to be reckoned with in opposing the radical left […]

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Jews Are Fighting for Western Civilization

Editor’s Note: The following is an article originally published on Gatestone Institute on August 26, 2025. With edits to match Minding the Campus’s style guidelines, it is crossposted here with permission. “The hate of the Jews,” Safra Catz, CEO of the U.S. technology giant Oracle, pointed out in 2024, “is the most ancient and continuous hate […]

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FIRE Overstates Conservative Censorship on Campus

The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) has once again taken the pulse of free expression on American campuses—and the patient’s health is declining. In its sixth annual College Free Speech Rankings, based on more than 68,000 student responses across 257 schools, FIRE reports that 166 institutions earned an “F” for their speech climate, […]

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Harvard Equates Criticizing Hamas Supporters With Racism

Higher education, legacy media, and the broader left have long wielded “anti-discrimination” as both philosophy and policy—not to foster debate, but to silence critics, distort established terms, and advance an anti-Western agenda. Since October 7, anti-Semitism suddenly could no longer be discussed without bringing up “Islamophobia” in the same venue. Leave it to the Ivy […]

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Join NAS for a Webinar on Anti-Semitism, Violence, and DEI in Higher Education

Join the National Association of Scholars on Monday, September 15, at 2:15 p.m. ET for what promises to be a lively discussion on anti-Semitism, violence, and “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (DEI) in higher education. This webinar is hosted by NAS in anticipation of the upcoming NAS DEI Anti-Semitism Study. It will explore the possibility that […]

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Department of Education Ends ‘Abusive’ Biden Policy That Funded Left-Wing Work-Study Election Jobs

Editor’s Note: The following is an article originally published on the College Fix on September 8, 2025. With edits to match Minding the Campus’s style guidelines, it is crossposted here with permission. Conservative election integrity advocates praised the Trump administration for rescinding a Biden-era guidance that allowed Federal Work-Study funds to be used to employ students to perform election jobs. […]

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Mimetic Desire Is Reshaping Higher Education

Academia is best understood as a social institution that thrives on what the French-American polymath Rene Girard called mimetic desire. According to Girard, humans are born with biological drives that steer us towards what we need to survive and procreate; however, beyond subsistence, our desires are shaped by the culture and models around us. The […]

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‘Fight Fiercely, Harvard. Fight! Fight! Fight!’

The headline on this epistle is from a great satiric song written in the middle of the last century by the late humorist and Harvard grad Tom Lehrer. Harvard has indeed been fighting the federal government fiercely this year, scoring a major victory last Wednesday when an Obama-appointed federal district judge, Allison Burroughs, declared that […]

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UChicago’s Self-Made Crisis

On September 2, Higher Ed Dive reported that the University of Chicago (UChicago) is embarking on a $100 million cost-cutting plan. The plan includes laying off up to 150 members of its staff and freezing admissions to 19 doctoral programs in the 2026–27 academic year—almost all of which are in the liberal arts and humanities, […]

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Don’t Learn to Code, Learn to Think and Adapt

The world is changing quickly. In the 2010s, computer science was considered one of the most “marketable” majors. Nowadays, it has an increasingly high unemployment rate. Philosophy on the other hand, once the caricature of a “useless” major, is now being praised by people like Marco Argenti, the CIO of Goldman Sachs, who stated in April […]

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The Inimitable Prime of Miss Jean Brodie

A delightful summer read—well, anytime read actually—is Scottish author Muriel Spark’s 20th-century novel, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1961), which also has an excellent 1969 film adaptation featuring Dame Maggie Smith. Set in an Edinburgh girls’ school during the 1930s, the story follows a group of students mentored by the unconventional if melodramatic teacher, Jean Brodie. The girls are known […]

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