The Chronicle of Higher Education
Thursday, July 2, 2009
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New Benefits Plan for Veterans Draws Colleges, and Critics

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has yet to release a tally of the colleges that will participate in its new Yellow Ribbon Program, which some advocates for student veterans say will distribute aid unfairly.

The Chronicle Review

Photo illustration Code Name Cassandra

Teaching English in California and analyzing data in Afghanistan involve remarkably similar skill sets, writes William C. Corley.
(Illustration by Tim Cook)

Brainstorm: Lives of the Mind

Gina Barreca
The One Kind Of Woman Who Drives Me Crazy
The Delicate Flowers want to be seen as unusual, and as _wonderfully_ different from the rest of their sex.

Kevin Carey
Pondering Higher Education Accountability
Incentives are the only game in town.

article illustration Learning to Heal Body and Mind From Mexico's Shamans

Students from a U. of New Mexico summer course on Mexican traditional medicine visit a traditional healer, Rosario Gaspar Lopez, who performs a limpia, or spiritual cleansing. Here she spits mescal on the person being cleansed to give a jolt to her system. (Photograph by Keith Dannemiller)

Chronicle Blogs

Discussion Forums

Colloquy

Read the transcript of a live chat with Gretchen C. Dobson, who oversees Tufts University's domestic and international alumni chapters, about how alumni networks are an important element in any institution's internationalization strategy.

Also of Interest

Convenience Is the Future

Monitoring classes on cellphones. Taking courses at multiple colleges. The college students of 2020 are going to demand an education on their terms. Is your college ready? Read the new report, "The College of 2020: Students," from Chronicle Research Services. Click here to read the free executive summary.

The Chronicle of Philanthropy

Businesses Buckle Up
Many of the largest American companies plan to decrease their charitable donations in 2009, or at least keep them level with last year's, according to the latest Chronicle survey of corporate giving.

Arts & Letters Daily

A guide to some of the best writing on the Web.

Chronicle Careers

 Jobs from more than 850 institutions -- 112 new listings.

 
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On Course

A professor looks for small changes he can make to move students toward making smarter choices.

Career News

A scholar's study of her own students suggests that while a professor's clothing might affect initial impressions, it doesn't make a difference in the long run.

The Two-Year Track

We can all learn something from students' struggles with poetry, no matter what we teach.

On Hiring

Academic Self-Fashioning
Academics hate to admit that dress plays a role in their professional lives, but the reality is that there are fashion trends and expectations aplenty even in academe.

Righting a Wrong
A scientist wonders why her university won't give grant-supported postdoctoral fellows the raises that are owed to them.

Employer Profiles In-depth information for job candidates, provided by employers.

2009 Great Colleges to Work For If you have been invited by your institution to participate in The Chronicle's Great Colleges to Work For survey and have questions about your participation, please send an e-mail message to chronicle@modernthink.com

Sections

The Faculty

A HOME IN ACADEME

Not long after he became provost at the University of Dayton, where he was taught and nurtured when he could barely speak English, Joseph Saliba returned to his native Lebanon to meet with alumni and seek new students. more...

Research & Books

TRACKING PERFORMANCE

The scholarly publishers Elsevier and Springer have unveiled new research tools that promise to help universities pinpoint their research strengths. more...

Government & Politics

ANOTHER LOOK AT RECRUITING

The Education Department has begun to develop new and, most likely, stricter rules about how colleges compensate their recruiters, and the changes may affect for-profit institutions the most. more...

Money & Management

THE CLOSING OF THE BOOKS

June 30 marks the end of the fiscal year for many colleges, and the financial reports that result may supply the first real news about the recession's impact on higher education. more...

Information Technology

LISTSERV 2.0

Electronic mailing lists, once hailed as the savior of scholarly communication, must now either change or fade away. more...


Students

A VOICE AMID THE NUMBERS

This week Robert J. Massa, one of the most outspoken national figures in admissions, will step down from his post at Dickinson College. more...

International

A HEALING SOJOURN IN MEXICO

American medical students learn new ways to think about disease and recovery as they study alternative medicine in Oaxaca. more...

Commentary

NOT GOOD ENOUGH

Poor writing persists because students don't try hard enough and aren't pushed to try harder, writes Bob Kunzinger. more...

The Chronicle Review

ISLAMIC CIVILIZATION IN PERIL

Muslims' inner spiritual lives are on the decline, throwing off their moral equilibrium and clouding their visions of a potentially bright, peaceful tomorrow, writes Ali A. Allawi. more...