Author: Reporter

Many college instructors are encountering a familiar classroom dynamic: students arrive able to discuss the “main idea” of a reading, but struggle to point to specific passages, explain how an argument develops, or engage closely with the text itself. Increasingly, that surface-level familiarity comes not from reading, but from AI-generated summaries.  Generative AI tools such as ChatGPT and NotebookLM can quickly produce fluent overviews of complex texts. While these tools can be useful for review or clarification, they also make it easy for students to bypass the cognitive work that reading is meant to support. Rather than attempting to monitor or restrict AI use, we experimented with…

Read More

Rothman has led the 25-campus system for nearly four years. Photo illustration by Justin Morrison/Inside Higher Ed | Liam Knox/Inside Higher Ed The standoff between Universities of Wisconsin president Jay Rothman and the system’s regents is over after the board voted Tuesday night to fire him at the end of a half-hour meeting. Rothman has been under pressure to resign, but he refused to do so and went public last week with the board’s campaign to get rid of him—saying he had been given no reason and that the board had threatened to fire him if he did not step…

Read More

Free speech advocates have long warned that the laws and regulations passed at the state, federal, and international level are chipping away at our ability to speak anonymously online. Now, Türkiye is threatening to gut that right directly — and asserting that social media platforms are playing along.According to Justice Minister Akın Gürlek, the Turkish government is submitting a proposal to parliament that would require people to provide a national ID number to use social media. Unregistered accounts will be removed by platforms. Gürlek also claims platforms have agreed to implement these terms — though which platforms, and which exact terms, are…

Read More

Listen to the article 3 min This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback. Dive Brief: Kansas is poised to restrict race-related classroom instruction across the state’s public colleges, and at least one free expression group is calling on Gov. Laura Kelly to intervene. Last month, Kansas lawmakers added language to the budget that would ban academic programs at public colleges from requiring students to take a “DEI-CRT course” beginning in the 2028-29 academic year. The bill does not define “DEI-CRT,” instead giving that power to the State Board of Regents, whose members are all political…

Read More

Uganda has made remarkable progress in expanding access to education, yet for many girls in post-conflict Northern Uganda, education still fails to translate into skills, dignity, or meaningful opportunities. Listening to girls’ voices reveals why a justice-oriented approach to education is urgently needed.  Government initiatives such as Universal Primary Education (UPE) and Universal Secondary Education (USE), and a handful of skills-based education programs supported by gender-responsive strategies introduced since 1997, have significantly expanded school enrollment and gender parity in primary education. These reforms reflect a strong national commitment to expanding educational opportunities. However, increased enrollment has not translated into completion…

Read More

A legendary figure in the history of academic freedom, Harry Keyishian, died on April 4, according to an announcement from Fairleigh Dickinson University, which was his academic home for 60 years. Harry came to FDU after he was fired in 1964 by the State University of New York for refusing to sign a loyalty oath. The Supreme Court case that bears his name, Keyishian v. Board of Regents (1967), remains the most important legal ruling in defense of academic freedom, enshrining it (in the words of Justice Brennan) as “a special concern of the First Amendment.” Harry and four other…

Read More

I first heard about Ball State University through my host family. I came to the United States as a high school exchange student in 2021, expecting to stay for just one year. That year turned into four and counting because of the ongoing war in Ukraine. After my exchange year, I took a gap year to pause, begin the college application process, and wait for my new visa to arrive. It was the most difficult and confusing year of my life, but it taught me a great deal about myself. As an international student from a low-income family in Ukraine,…

Read More

The University of Missouri has stripped the Legion of Black Collegians—its historic Black student governing body—as well as at least four other minority affinity groups of all annual designated funding, starting in July, The Columbia Missourian reported. In addition to losing official funding, the groups will no longer be recognized as university-sponsored organizations. Mizzou officials said in a public statement that they made the decision in order to comply with DEI restrictions issued by the Department of Justice in July. In an email to Inside Higher Ed, university spokesperson Christopher Ave said that it was the funding model—not the organizations…

Read More

Sallie James is an economist, former scholar, and director of development at the Cato Institute, longtime FIRE friend and donor — and now, a welcome new addition to FIRE’s Board of Directors.Sallie brings with her a wealth of knowledge and experience in nonprofit management, policy analysis, and volunteer work, along with a deep appreciation for the principles of free expression that will help guide FIRE for years to come.Before joining Cato in 2006, Sallie was an executive officer in the Office of Trade Negotiations in the Australian Government’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. She also served as a senior…

Read More

April 7, 2026 Posted in: Homepage News, Press Releases, University U.S. News & World Report has released its 2026 Best Graduate Schools rankings, and Montclair State University programs are once again ranked among the best in the nation. The Montclair programs that participate in the annual survey include Education, Public Health, Audiology, Speech-Language Pathology, Clinical Psychology, Business specializations including Accounting, Business Analytics, Finance, Marketing and Supply Chain Management; Fine Arts and the University’s Part-Time MBA program. Highlights from the 2026 Best Graduate Programs Rankings: Montclair’s Graduate Offerings Montclair offers 116 graduate and eight doctoral programs across a range of disciplines…

Read More