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Tag Archives: department of education

Online Education: The Great American Class Divider

Here we go again.  And there’s more.  Corinthian Colleges, after having dashed any academic hopes of its students, is now also accused of predatory lending.  That the wake and fiasco continue should come as no surprise, as online education continues to be the equivalent of fast food in many instances–too convenient and advertised with the…

September 20, 2014 in Ethics, Faculty, For-Profit Institutions, Undergraduates.

Rotten Teacher's Apple: The Common Core

In a recent opinion piece by William J. Bennett in the Wall Street Journal, “The Conservative Case for a Common Core,” with an unfortunate double-entendre title that misfires, one statement makes good sense:  “Nearly all Americans agree that to prepare a child for civic responsibility and competition in the modern economy, he or she must be…

September 18, 2014 in Academic Freedom, Faculty, Undergraduates.

"Help Me. I'm Poor.": Don't Worry, Grandma Got Run Over by Your Tuition Payment

Seeing the Department of Education’s Tweet of “Help Me. I’m Poor” with a picture of Kristen Wiig’s character in Bridesmaids memorably shnookered at first made me think yes, she is poor because she is saddled by student loan debts. But then I thought about an all-too-common occurrence these days. Increasingly kids are going to college…

June 25, 2014 in Faculty, Undergraduates.

At the Risk of Endlessly Repeating Myself, Which Party Now Controls the Department of Education?

Yes, some charter schools, especially those run by non-profit foundations, are excellent and ought to be acknowledged for that excellence. But to declare that this week is National Charter Schools Week, as the Obama administration has done, not only ignores the often dismal performance of corporate charter schools—the sham that they provide any sort of…

May 8, 2014 in Faculty.

The Fight to Get Your Education Loans Forgiven Is On!

By David Kociemba This is the seventh in a series of Academe Blog guest posts arranged by the AAUP Committee on Contingency and the Profession in celebration of Campus Equity Week. For information on and resources for CEW, see the national website at http://www.campusequityweek.org/2013/. There’s a new benefit worth tens of thousands of dollars that…

November 4, 2013 in Contingent Faculty, Undergraduates.

Building a Movement of Faculty and Students

By Maxwell John Love This is the fourth in a series of Academe Blog guest posts arranged by the AAUP Committee on Contingency and the Profession in celebration of Campus Equity Week. For information on and resources for CEW, see the national website at http://www.campusequityweek.org/2013/.  Growing up in a rural town in Wisconsin, I spent my…

October 31, 2013 in Contingent Faculty, Diversity, Faculty.

Revisiting the Gainful Employment Rules

In June, the Department of Education released its new rules about for-profit colleges. The regulations are known as the “gainful employment” rules, because they seek to ensure that graduates are adequately prepared for the workforce (and prepared to pay off their student loans) once they leave school. The final rules were weaker than those originally…

December 13, 2011 in Corporate Influence, For-Profit Institutions.

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