What Really Happened at Texas State’s Charlie Kirk Memorial

Author’s Note: I serve as a Turning Point USA (TPUSA) chapter president, but the views expressed here are my own. What follows reflects my personal experience as a Texas State student who organized the memorial and witnessed the events of that day. When Turning Point USA at Texas State hosted a memorial for Charlie Kirk […]

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Letter to the Editor: Boys, Girls, and the Costs of Overprotection

Editor’s Note: This letter was submitted to the editor of Minding the Campus in response to his article, “College Students in a Romance Recession, Boys Blame ‘Hoeflation.’” Jared, the problems you identify in this rather depressing article are symptoms rather than causes. The cause of the current malaise among our youth begins at the beginning. […]

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The Case for a Creator, Backed by Science

I think only an idiot can be an atheist. We must admit that there exists an incomprehensible power or force with limitless foresight and knowledge that started the whole universe going in the first place.[1] – Christian Anfinsen (1916-1995). Professor of Chemistry at Harvard University and winner of the 1972 Nobel Prize in Chemistry For […]

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Self-Esteem Is a Social Hazard

Once upon a time, people dressed sharply, minded their manners, and worried about how their behavior reflected on their families and communities. Sure, this was partly driven by vanity, but it was also useful. Such prosocial vanity is maligned by modern standards as shallow, but it was not shallow; it served a purpose: it kept people […]

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A Student’s Short Take on DEI: It’s Undermining Education and Intellectual Growth

“Diversity, equity, and inclusion” ideology, or DEI, has replaced merit and intellectual diversity with forced inclusivity and conformity. In K-12 education, this shift has often meant lowering expectations to prevent students from feeling excluded, rather than raising all students to higher standards. In practice, this prioritizes social comfort over genuine learning. For example, philosopher and […]

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Faculty Face Widespread Punishment for Speech, Administrators and Unions Stay Silent

The ideal of academic freedom has always rested on a simple promise: scholars must be free to pursue truth, wherever it leads. But new data from the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) show how far higher education has drifted from that ideal. In FIRE’s latest survey, an astonishing 94 percent of faculty reported […]

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Helicopter Parenting Won’t Get Your Child into Harvard

It’s that time of year again: the college admissions process for American high school seniors, where students race to prepare application essays for a chance to study at many of America’s elite colleges and universities. As a private college admissions counselor at my firm Invictus Prep, I guide a handful of students through the college […]

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Trump’s Social Media Vetting Faces Free Speech Backlash. But Some Foreign Students Agree with Him.

The Trump administration’s new monitoring of social media for visa applicants and visa holders, in particular for international students, has generated vigorous debate over the free speech rights of non-Americans. But some of those most affected by the new policies support the intention of protecting American identity through strict immigration policy. The State Department in […]

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Fewer Foreign Students Coming to the U.S., Data Show

Editor’s Note: The following article was published by the College Fix on October 30, 2025. With edits to match Minding the Campus’s style guidelines, it is crossposted here with permission. The United States will likely see fewer foreign college students in America this school year, according to an analysis by the New York Times. The Times’s analysis is based […]

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Universities Have a Logic Problem

There is nothing like political ideology to create difficulties with thinking, and the situation worsens when it is channeled through institutions. Among the most pronounced sources of such difficulties, ironically, is the university. I would like to suggest that the logical problem of induction is the single biggest problem in higher education. A few words […]

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It’s Not ‘Misogyny’ to Notice What’s Happening Between Men and Women

Author’s Note: This article originally appeared in my weekly Top of Mind newsletter, which goes out to subscribers every Thursday. Sign up to receive it directly in your inbox. John K. Wilson’s essay in Inside Higher Ed, “Misogyny and ‘Hoeflation’ at the National Association of Scholars,” attacks my essay, “College Students in a Romance Recession, […]

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Oklahoma Should Build on 2024 Draft Social Studies Standards, Not Return to the Flawed 2019 Model

Editor’s Note: The following article was originally published by the Oklahoma Council Of Public Affairs on October 29, 2025. With edits to match Minding the Campus’s style guidelines, it is crossposted here with permission. Lindel Fields, Oklahoma’s new State Superintendent of Public Instruction, has announced that the Oklahoma State Department of Education (OSDE) will “restart the process of reviewing […]

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Higher Ed Needs to Remember That Age Discrimination Is Illegal Too

President Donald Trump should be commended for his resolute efforts to rid the nation’s colleges and universities of “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (DEI) practices that discriminate against individuals on the basis of race, gender, and ethnicity in violation of federal law. The President correctly believes that employment and admissions decisions should be made, and are […]

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Why Universities Should Welcome (and Sign) Trump’s Compact

Editor’s Note: The following article was originally published by the National Association of Scholars on October 28, 2025. With edits to match Minding the Campus’s style guidelines, it is crossposted here with permission. On October 1, the Trump administration sent a letter to nine American universities offering a “Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education.” […]

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Academia’s Monsters

In a few days, hordes of witches, ghosts, walking skeletons, and other assorted monsters will descend upon my suburban cul-de-sac. None of them frightens me very much, with the possible exception of the overweight 45-year-old dude in the Spider-Man costume. No, as a long-time college professor, I’m most afraid these days of three things: bad robots, the abyss, and […]

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Mead Chapel Will (Rightly) Haunt Middlebury

Halloween is when restless ghosts of the past return, and with the holiday approaching, it’s a fitting moment to resurrect the story of Middlebury College’s (Middlebury) renaming of Mead Memorial Chapel. On April 9, 2025, Judge Robert A. Mello of the Addison Unit of the Vermont Superior Court ruled in the college’s favor, dismissing all […]

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Guess Who’s Teaching America’s College Students?

Recent reports show that parents, regardless of political affiliation, still aspire to send their children to college. Yet they would be wise to carefully consider where they are sending them, what kind of education they will receive, and who will be teaching them. The concern is not just about academic quality but about the ideological […]

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Lisa Siraganian Gets Viewpoint Diversity Backward

“He who knows only his own side of the case knows little of that.” — John Stuart Mill The debate over “viewpoint diversity” has moved from faculty lounges to legislatures and boardrooms. Universities from Ohio to Florida have written it into law, and others, like Johns Hopkins, have partnered with think tanks to bring new […]

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Trans and Palestinian Identities: Partners in Fabrication?

Much discourse on college campuses centers on identity politics—the idea that one’s identity, or the way one identifies, deserves attention and respect more than classical ideals of the academy. Instead of discussing philosophy, ethics, or what it means to live a good and moral life, students, egged on by their professors, engage in conversations about marginalization and who […]

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College Students in a Romance Recession, Boys Blame ‘Hoeflation’

Love seems to be over for college students. That’s at least what I gathered from a recent conversation with a student in Texas. I’ll leave him unnamed—and because he wants total anonymity, I won’t even tell you what school he goes to. But I will tell you he’s not scoring dates. And it’s not for […]

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Republican Senator Says Elite Universities Are Using H-1B Visas to Staff DEI Positions

Editor’s Note: The following is an article originally published by the College Fix on October 21, 2025. With edits to match Minding the Campus’s style guidelines, it is crossposted here with permission. Elite universities are using the H-1B foreign worker visa program to staff their “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (DEI) offices, according to a Republican senator. Missouri Senator Eric […]

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