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Campus Climate
Can a Liberal Arts Core Curriculum Reduce Racial Tensions? Many Syracuse Faculty Say, ‘Yes’
Roiled by a series of hate crimes in November, Syracuse University faculty and administrators are trying to devise creative ways to improve campus climate. Last week, 148 faculty members signed a letter proposing an idea – a liberal arts core curriculum “attuned to issues of difference and diversity.”
February 12, 2020
News Roundup
Binghamton U Receives $60 Million Donation for Baseball Stadium Upgrade
New York’s Binghamton University received $60 million from an anonymous donor to upgrade its baseball stadium, reported the Associated Press.
February 12, 2020
News Roundup
Report: International Enrollments at Graduate Schools on the Rise
International graduate application and first-time enrollment rates have increased at U.S. universities for the first time since fall 2016, reported the Council of Graduate Schools (CGS).
February 12, 2020
News Roundup
University of Oklahoma Professor Compares Age-Related Jibe to ‘N-Word,’ Apologizes
A professor at The University of Oklahoma has been criticized for putting on par ‘Ok boomer,’ a phrase used to mock older people, and the N-word, reported OU Daily. “Calling someone a boomer is like calling someone a n—–,” said the professor, Dr. Peter Gade, director of graduate studies and Gaylord Family Endowed Chair. Gade […]
February 12, 2020
Latest News
U of Central Florida Provides Mentorship for Male Minorities
Since its establishment in 2008, “B2B” has provided academic and on-campus support to male students of color through workshops and events at the University of Central Florida.
February 12, 2020
Latest News
Report Examines Benefits of Higher Education for the Incarcerated
As much as 69% of incarcerated people want to enroll in postsecondary education. Over 600,000 people return to the community from incarceration each year. Yet, only 10 states provide postsecondary educational opportunities that are fully accessible to all incarcerated individuals. And fewer than one in three states is using key federal and state funding pathways […]
February 11, 2020
Community Colleges
Community College Leaders Prepare to Lobby on Capitol Hill
On Tuesday, day three of the Community College National Legislative Summit, Diane Auer Jones, the U.S. Department of Education’s principal deputy under secretary, highlighted the government’s upcoming priorities for community colleges.
February 11, 2020
Press Releases
Diverse: Issues In Higher Education highlights 35 outstanding women during Women’s History Month
PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Maya Matthews Minter Maya@DiverseEducation.com Direct line: 703.385.2411 FAIRFAX, Va. — In honor of Women’s History Month, Diverse will publish its ninth annual special report recognizing the contributions of women to higher education. To be circulated at several annual higher education meetings, the March 19, 2020 edition will highlight 35 […]
February 11, 2020
Campus Climate
Practicing Our Ideals: How the Interfaith Campus Can Restore Civil Discourse
Institutions of higher education share a commitment to public purpose and the common good. The education of our students is for their prosperity, but also for a just and prosperous society. The college or university campus offers a unique opportunity for maturity and formation, freedom and prescription, change and tradition, diversity and commonality.
February 11, 2020
News Roundup
Culver-Stockton Board of Trustees Welcomes New President
Last week, Dr. Douglas B. Palmer was elected the 27th president of the Culver-Stockton College Board of Trustees, replacing Dr. Kelly M. Thompson, who plans to retire this June, KHQA reported. Before joining the private Christian liberal arts college in Canton, Missouri, Palmer previously served as provost, vice president of academic affairs and dean at […]
February 11, 2020
News Roundup
Concordia University’s Portland Campus Will Shut Its Doors This Spring
After 115 years, Concordia University’s Portland campus will shut down after the spring semester. Concordia University – Portland’s board of regents made the decision by vote last Friday in the face of declining enrollment, The Oregonian reported. The board found that “the university’s current and projected enrollment and finances make it impossible to continue its […]
February 11, 2020
News Roundup
Bellarmine University Goes Test Optional
Bellarmine University, a private Catholic liberal arts school in Louisville, Kentucky, will no longer require applicants to submit SAT and ACT scores, WDRB.com reported. The new test optional policy will kick in for students starting in fall 2021. The university will still consider students’ high school grades, extracurricular activities, counselor recommendations, work and leadership experience. […]
February 11, 2020
Opinion
Remorse and the College Admission Scandal’s Stiffest Penalty to Date
Douglas Hodge, is the former CEO of Pimco, a company you might know about if you pay attention to your workplace retirement funds. PIMCO is one of the cornerstone investments on the bond side, in other words, the safety play. You make your risky bets on the equity mutual funds. Bonds are like the sure thing. So of course you’d figure to see a guy like Hodge caught in the college admissions scandal.
February 11, 2020
HBCUs
Community College National Legislative Summit Tackles Policy Priorities
Community college presidents and trustees on Monday gathered at the Community College National Legislative Summit to discuss current issues affecting higher education, including the need for increased funding and more student advocacy.
February 10, 2020
News Roundup
Jackson State President Resigns After Arrest in Prostitution Sting
Jackson State University President Dr. William Bynum Jr. resigned from his position Monday after being arrested in a prostitution sting over the weekend in central Mississippi, reported the Associated Press. Bynum was among more than a dozen people arrested in the sting. Also arrested in the police operation was Shonda McCarthy, director of the Jackson […]
February 10, 2020
Other News
At Department of Medicine’s Diversity and Inclusion Week, Challenging Conventional Wisdom
“Great minds think differently.” If there was a unifying idea expressed by speakers at the Department of Medicine’s first diversity and inclusion week, it was probably that. Hannah Valantine, MD, of the National Institutes of Health, said it first, when she opened the Jan. 29 sessions with her grand rounds presentation. Sonia Aranza, a global […]
February 10, 2020
Latest News
Remembering Dr. Alain LeRoy Locke, the Man Behind the Harlem Renaissance
Dr. Alain LeRoy Locke, a longtime Howard University professor, art critic, Harvard-educated writer, first Black Rhodes Scholar, pioneering philosopher and complex race man gave expression to a movement he called “the New Negro.” We know it as the Harlem Renaissance.
February 10, 2020
Students
How My Tenure as Vice President at an HBCU Made Me a Better Scholar
My doctoral training gave me many things, including the “statistical chops” to analyze cross-sectional, nationally-representative, and complex-sampled survey data from HBCUs with relative ease. But I lacked the practical experience at an HBCU that could enrich my understanding, deepen my perspectives, and connect my interpretations back to the context from which they came.
February 10, 2020
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