higher-education
My Vassar College Faculty ID Makes Everything OK
Kiese Laymon · 11/29/14 01:56PMThe fourth time a Poughkeepsie police officer told me that my Vassar College Faculty ID could make everything OK was three years ago. I was driving down Wilbur Avenue. When the white police officer, whose head was way too small for his neck, asked if my truck was stolen, I laughed, said no, and shamefully showed him my license and my ID, just like Lanre Akinsiku. The ID, which ensures that I can spend the rest of my life in a lush state park with fat fearless squirrels, surrounded by enlightened white folks who love talking about Jon Stewart, Obama, and civility, has been washed so many times it doesn’t lie flat.
Fake Student Wraps Up Fake College Career With Graduation Bomb Threat
Adam Weinstein · 05/19/14 09:40AMAdam Weinstein · 04/30/14 12:57PM
Christian College Shuts Down LGBT-Friendly Student Paper
Adam Weinstein · 04/28/14 05:15PMTaylor Berman · 03/05/14 02:45PM
CUNY Is Paying David Petraeus $200,000 to Work Three Hours a Week
J.K. Trotter · 07/01/13 10:43AMA first-time adjunct professor teaching a full course load at the City University of New York can expect to pull in around $25,000 per year. If you recently resigned as C.I.A. director over a long-time affair with your biographer, however, you can expect to be paid eight times as much for a fraction of the work.
Cord Jefferson · 05/22/13 11:32AM
Rochester Professor Wonders Why Rapists Shouldn't Be Allowed to 'Reap the Benefits' of Passed Out Girls
Cord Jefferson · 03/29/13 01:27PMSteven Landsburg is an economics professor at the University of Rochester. Formerly a Slate columnist, Landsburg is well-versed in the art of the high-minded counterintuitive take, like "Don't Vote: It makes more sense to play the lottery" and "Do the Poor Deserve Life Support?" With this as his background, Landsburg's students have come to expect a bit of intellectual boldness from the instructor, whom they once elected Professor of the Year, as Landsburg's own website is quick to note. But last week, one of Landsburg's thought experiments crossed the border that separates irreverent from rapey, and at least two students were offended in the process.
As NYU's Tuition Soars, NYU Employees Leave with Seven-Figure Parting Gifts
Cord Jefferson · 03/04/13 05:06PMIt's nice work if you can quit it. An article from yesterday's New York Times goes into the shameful and mysterious phenomenon that is New York University's bloated financial gifts to people who willingly resign from the school. There was, for instance, Jacob Lew, a former NYU executive vice president (and the new Treasury Secretary), who got almost $700,000 after leaving NYU and joining Citigroup in 2006. After Lew came Harold Koplewicz, the psychiatrist who quit the NYU Medical Center on his own accord and yet was still paid a $1.2 million lump sum in the 2009-10 fiscal year.
Cooper Union Might Not Be Free Anymore
Max Rivlin-Nadler · 02/17/13 11:40AMTuition-free arts school Cooper Union, whose new academic building peeks out of Cooper Square like a beautiful, serene spaceship, will most likely start charging students tuition to make up for a shortfall of about $12 million each year. The school began charging tuition for graduate students last year, a decision that was met with student protests, including a group of students who barricaded themselves inside of the iconic original Cooper Union building.
Emory University President Praises Three-Fifths Compromise As Great 'Pragmatic' Solution
Max Rivlin-Nadler · 02/16/13 05:15PMWriting in the winter issue of Emory Magazine, President James Wagner rhapsodizes about the need for compromise in a politically turbulent society. He points out that the constitution was in itself a compromise. Another example he cites, is the Three-Fifths Compromise, which legally represented slaves as less than a person. He writes:
Missouri State University Misspells Own Name on Bags Given to Students
Robert Kessler · 02/14/13 01:09PMMistakes. We all make them, it's understandable, forgivable, a part of human nature even. But when there's a particular irony to said mistake, it makes it nearly impossible not to mock that mistake, and there's nothing more ironic than an institution of higher learning misspelling its own damn name.
Kelly Bensimon is Still Around, Going to Business School
Robert Kessler · 01/28/13 06:58PMUT Law Professor Says Blacks and Mexican-Americans Can't Compete with White Students
Cord Jefferson · 12/10/12 02:40PMControversial University of Texas at Austin law professor Lino Graglia gave an interview to the BBC in which he claims, among other things, that blacks and Latinos can't compete with white students, particularly because of the fact that so many of them are raised in single-parent households. Graglia's interview was related to the fact, as we've told you, UT is currently in a battle with a white student it rejected who claims that the school's affirmative action program is to blame for her having to go to a second-rate college.
Why Are You People Paying $61,236 For a Year of College?
Robert Kessler · 10/12/12 01:16PMMeet the College Chancellor with a Suburban Sex Dungeon
Maureen O'Connor · 08/01/11 12:48PMJust in Time for Yale/Harvard Football Game, Harvard Mocks Murdered Yale Student
Richard Lawson · 11/17/10 12:39PMHigh Schools Making Everyone Valedictorians Now
Adrian Chen · 06/27/10 03:30PMThe Times today explores the trend of high schools naming more than one person—as many as ten!—their Valedictorian. Some people are worried that this might dilute the honor of being named high school valedictorian, which is akin to worrying that water might dilute the bottle of urine someone is forcing you to drink.