
The presence of students in the Occupy movement has become more well-documented by the day, but the degree to which their professors have goaded them to take part in it has received much less attention.
Forty-four scholars signed onto an open letter critical of former U. S. Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA) and former U. S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA) but a look at the signatories raises more questions about them than about the presidential candidates.
On the face of it, Democratic President Barack Obama’s Race to the Top education policy is cheaper for American taxpayers than Republican President George W. Bush’s No Child Left Behind.
Offering observations on it from the faculty lounge itself provokes even more indignation.
Believe it or not, yet another university has been accused of deception in a transaction with a citizen.
Lieutenant General William Boykin has stared cowards in the face before, and he won’t hesitate to do so now.
Economics—far from being dismal—is cause for hope, joy, cheer, and optimism.

See how English professors sparked the Occupy movement in the latest issue of Accuracy in Academia’s monthly Campus Report newsletter.





The authors who are read most widely are those who are no longer around. Former Accuracy in Academia executive director Dan Flynn pays homage to a quartet of them in his latest book, Blue Collar Intellectuals.








