Day: April 10, 2013

Intellectual Diversity Tackled at Harvard

“Intellectual Diversity in Legal Academe” was the subject of an April 5th conference sponsored by the Harvard Federalist Society at the university’s law school. The videos of the one-day meeting are now available here. You can watch the first panel, entitled “Is There a Lack of Intellectual Diversity in Law School Faculties?,” below.    Among […]

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Zakaria Wrings His Hands over a “Crisis” in Higher Ed

Fareed Zakaria, in his new Time magazine column, “The Thin-Envelope Crisis,”  does some hand-wringing over the supposed complicity of our colleges and universities in the decline of economic mobility in our country. He writes, “The institutions that have been the best at opening access in the U.S. have been its colleges and universities. If they […]

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Let’s Listen to Those Scary Tales about Student Loans

Writer Christopher Shea argued in the Washington Post that the problems associated with student loans – and by extension, the cost of college – are overstated. Contrary to many of the sob stories in the media, says Shea, “…it’s almost always well worth what it does cost — assuming that you graduate and, if your  loans […]

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Do Your Homework, Big Teacher Is Watching

Big news about homework: a new technology allows professors to monitor the reading and studying of their students outside of class. Digital tools record what students do on their e-textbooks: how often they open it and to what pages, whether they highlight or not, whether they take notes. It’s called CourseSmart, and it offers a […]

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How MOOCs Really Work

Did you know you can get a degree in your pajamas? It’s true, the company EdConnect assures us–thousands of students are doing it every day. Meanwhile, in California, the legislature and governor are cooking up a “faculty free” college experience: just take exams to get a degree. Too lazy to take your own exam? Maybe […]

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