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Higher Ed Must Recommit to Its Enlightenment Roots
Universities’ own mistakes helped pave the way for government attacks on academic freedom, Emily Chamlee-Wright writes.

AAUP Report: Faculty Salaries Rise Again, Though Not to Pre-Pandemic High
An uptick in faculty average salary wasn’t enough to recover to 2019-level compensation. The gender pay gap also persists, along with low per-course compensation for part-timers.

The Handwriting Revolution
Five semesters after ChatGPT changed education forever, some professors are taking their classes back to the pre-internet era.

New Data Shows Attendance Fosters Student Success
Faculty say attendance is known to promote learning and improve student outcomes. Students say they want more flexibility to manage outside pressures.
Judge Releases Harvard Researcher After 4-Month Detention

Tulane Environmentalist Resigns Amid Research ‘Gag Order’
Kimberly Terrell, director of community engagement at the Tulane Environmental Law Clinic, alleges that university officials told her not to publicly discuss her research after someone at the state capitol cited it as evidence that Tulane is “anti–chemical industry.”

Citing Ohio’s Sweeping Higher Ed Law, College Refuses to Sign Union Contract
Central Ohio Technical College said it rejected a tentative agreement because provisions conflicted with Senate Bill 1. Faculty say the institution acted too late and must sign.

Report: Higher Ed ‘Re-Norming’ With Tech
New data from Tyton Partners shows that despite students’ embrace of generative AI, most far prefer human-centered support and skills-based learning.
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