Although Columbia University administrators claim that a committee appointed by its president cleared the school of charges of an anti-Israel bias that borders on anti-Semitism, their feeling of exoneration may be a bit premature.
A student who has taken classes by a professor we wrote about three months ago has taken issue with our coverage of a professor at the University of Tennessee. That student’s response follows.
A few weeks ago, the Harvard faculty went off on President Larry Summers because he said there are differences between men and women in math and science. Good thing he left out librarians.
To calm the troubled masses of poor students that live in fear that the test they took or the paper they turned in would be returned with scores of red pen marks denoting their mistakes, schools are now eliminating the color red as a correction color.
The problem of plagiarism in college was one in which students were, more often than not, the perpetrators, not their professors. Now, the pedagogues themselves are increasingly suspect.
A professor tuning in to hear AIA executive director Mal Kline’s recent interview on the Jim Bohannon how takes exception, sort of, to the conclusions reached by both the host and the guest.
It is hard to find a better recent case of political correctness gone insane than what happened at the University of California at Santa Cruz in early March.
A look at the recent record of the American Association of University Professors reveals the real agenda of the academic freedom watchdog, according to Mal Kline, executive director of Accuracy in Academia.
From Ex Corde Ecclesiae (1990). Although he passed away last weekend, Pope John Paul II continues to speak to generations through the timeless truths in his writings.