San José State’s Dispiriting Volleyball Saga

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published by the James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal on December 4, 2024. With edits to match Minding the Campus’s style guidelines, it is crossposted here with permission. The San José State University (SJSU) women’s volleyball team made international news this season, with coverage by the BBC, the Telegraph, Quillette, the New York Times, CNN, […]

Read More

Federal Student Loans Drive Up College Tuition Levels

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published by Mises Institute on December 18, 2023. With edits to match Minding the Campus’s style guidelines, it is crossposted here with permission. Mises Wire contributor Kevin Van Elswyk, in his November 29 article “Student Loans: The Continuing Crisis That Is Getting Worse,” nicely summarizes the current confusion and scandal of federal student loan […]

Read More

Christian Ethics Are the Anecdote for Research Misconduct

Research misconduct scandal after research misconduct scandal has surfaced in the science world as of late. Between neuroscientist and National Institute of Health (NIH) officer Eliezer Masliah, who Minding the Campus contributor David Randall reported on in late September, and superconductivity physicist Ranga Dias, whom I reported on, news of scientific misconduct has become increasingly […]

Read More

A Great Trump Appointment: Jay Bhattacharya (Part 1)

Probably the most important federal funder of traditional advanced research is the National Institutes of Health (NIH). President-Elect Trump has appointed a remarkable man to head that key branch of the federal government, Jay Bhattacharya, M.D., and Ph.D. Professor Bhattacharya is the only person I have ever met who has published articles in such prestigious […]

Read More

From Booker T. to MAGA: The Populist Challenge to Higher Education’s Elite Vision

WEB Dubois is a hero of the academic left because he adopted Marxism in his latter days—battling with the FBI, joining the Communist Party in 1961, and then emigrating to Ghana, where he died in 1963. But what is often forgotten is the earlier great debate he had with Booker T. Washington in the latter […]

Read More

Ivy League Lawsuit Dismissed. What It Means for Student-Athletes.

The recent dismissal of a lawsuit challenging the Ivy League’s ban on athletic scholarships has brought renewed attention to the longstanding policies of some of the nation’s most prestigious universities. The case, filed by former Ivy League athletes at Brown, Tamenang Choh, and Grace Kirk, accused all Ivy League schools and the Ivy League Council of Presidents of violating […]

Read More

A Look at Super Leagues

College sports is on the verge of a profound transformation. Discussions surrounding the creation of a “super league” have been gaining momentum, fueled by the rapid expansion of power conferences like the Big Ten and SEC. But what exactly is a super league, and how could it redefine college athletics—and, more importantly, higher education?  For […]

Read More

Four Atlantic Kings (For Ana Maestro)

Did Thomas Jefferson ever meet England’s King George III? It would seem not. In 1786, he visited Buckingham House and stayed overnight. Yes, it was called a “house” in those days. As a gardener and a farmer, the American Founder appears to have wanted to see Buckinghamshire’s famous Stowe Gardens. But to leave his visit […]

Read More

If You Want Young Adults to Grow Up, Don’t Bar Them from Serious Work

Author’s Note: This excerpt is from my weekly “Top of Mind” email, sent to subscribers every Thursday. For more content like this and to receive the full newsletter each week, sign up on Minding the Campus’s homepage. Simply go to the right side of the page, look for “SIGN UP FOR OUR WEEKLY NEWSLETTER, ‘TOP OF MIND,’” and […]

Read More

Cancel Culture Enables Anti-Semitism to Spread at Sarah Lawrence

Sarah Lawrence College (SLC) fell last week after the student-led Divestment Coalition occupied the school’s main administrative building and established an encampment on campus. The protests, supported by external groups such as National Students for Justice in Palestine and the Palestinian Youth Movement’s New York City chapter, were essentially facilitated by the school, with the […]

Read More

Don’t Let Colleges Keep Ducking Accountability on Student Loans

Most of the problems with student loans are due to a misalignment of incentives. There are three parties to a student loan: the student, the lender—meaning the federal government because we use a government-as-lender system—and the college. A good student loan system would align the incentives so that no party can benefit by making the […]

Read More

College Students Need to Learn Discipline

When checking my Yahoo emails in the morning, I always inevitably pass by the news section on the front page. I almost never actually read the articles, though—until recently. I was struck by the title and could not help but click it. My approach was certainly one of skepticism—clickbait is all too common on the […]

Read More

Race-Based Hiring Programs Persist at Public Universities. Here’s How.

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published by the Washington Free Beacon on November 26, 2024. With edits to match Minding the Campus’s style guidelines, it is crossposted here with permission. In September 2022, the Department of Industrial Engineering at the University of Illinois Chicago (UIC) made a bold promise to the school’s Office of Diversity, Equity, […]

Read More

Dual Enrollment Is a Deceptive Fix for Declining Admissions

What drives colleges and universities to offer dual enrollment classes for high school students? Well, many colleges and universities have experienced significant declines in freshmen enrollment in the last ten years—accelerated by the COVID-19 shutdown but continuing since. Some have regained ground by enrolling more transfer and graduate students, but the outlook remains bleak. This […]

Read More

Feminism’s Greatest Achievement

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published by PJ Media on November 11, 2024. With edits to match Minding the Campus’s style guidelines, it is crossposted here with permission. The destruction of Western Civilization is coming not from the scimitars of rampaging Islamic hordes, or from the goose-stepping Nazi thugs, or the fanatical Soviet or Chinese communists. Rather, […]

Read More

Law Schools Have Created Two Legal Systems, Two Teaching Standards, and Two Personalities

Consumer rights advocate and Harvard Law graduate Ralph Nader once addressed a group of law students at his alma mater. Among other criticisms of legal training, he suggested that there are two law schools: a school of the law and a school of the unlawful. He had the right observation but the wrong diagnosis—he focused […]

Read More

The Climate Case of the Century

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published by Judith Curry on November 13, 2024. With edits to match Minding the Campus’s style guidelines, it is crossposted here with permission. On the 12th of November, the Hague Court of Appeal ruled in the “climate case of the century” that Milieudefensie (“FoE”) filed against Shell in 2019. FoE demands […]

Read More

2024’s Top College Sports Scandals

University of Florida (UF) At UF, men’s basketball coach Todd Golden faces serious allegations of sexual harassment, stalking, and exploitation. As detailed in a Title IX complaint filed on September 27, the accusations against Golden include sending unsolicited explicit photos, aggressively targeting students on social media, and engaging in stalking.  The Independent Flordia Alligator reported […]

Read More

Activism Does Not Belong in the Academy

In recent years, activism has become increasingly visible in academia, often permeating classrooms, faculty hiring practices, and research agendas. This trend has generated both support and concern across university campuses. While, in some cases, activism can be a powerful force for social change, its growing presence in academic settings has raised important questions about its […]

Read More

The Caliban of Liberty

Thomas Paine arrived in America on November 30, 1774. He had to be carried ashore in Philadelphia half-dead from a shipboard fever. He left behind in England a life of poverty and failure, and he came to America with anger and resentment at the good and great who lived so well when he lived so […]

Read More

Two Essays on Boston University’s Decision to “Pause” Admissions to Doctoral Programs

Editor’s Note: This article presents two essays on Boston University’s decision to “pause” admissions to its doctoral programs. The first is by Cassandra Nelson, a visiting fellow in literature at the Lumen Center in Madison, Wisconsin, and an associate fellow at the University of Virginia’s Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture. Her book A Theology […]

Read More

Highlights from the College Board’s Trends Papers

The College Board’s annual release of the Trends in College Pricing and Student Aid always contains a wealth of information on the latest enrollment and financial data for higher education. It is also notable that this report is much more informative, useful, and usable than anything put out by the Department of Education. If you […]

Read More
1 2 3 246