Harvard To Stop Requiring DEI Statements for Many Faculty Positions
Harvard is taking steps away from politicization. Will other schools follow?
Harvard is taking steps away from politicization. Will other schools follow?
"I am not in the newsroom," the embattled NPR chieftain said over and over again.
The long-time public radio editor's resignation proves he was right all along.
Colleges have turned away from standardized testing in admissions. Are the tests really that bad?
When schools get rid of advanced offerings, they hurt smart, underprivileged students.
Akiva Malamet has interesting posts on these topics at the Econlib site.
DEI statements are political litmus tests.
When people from historically privileged groups are facing censorship, that doesn't mean people in historically marginalized groups are actually being empowered.
A Texas judge ordered that the airline submit to training on the rights of religious believers after losing a religious discrimination lawsuit.
It may be part of a larger reassessment of subjecting all areas of life to ideological tests.
His panicked manifesto contains a strong case against CRT activism, but he ultimately falls into the same trap as his enemies.
Political appointees should have no role in faculty hiring decisions.
Teachers are citing West Virginia v. Barnette to protect their right not to be compelled to say something they disagree with.
"We are adamant that the hiring committee...not extend a job offer to Dr. Yoel Inbar," reads the petition.
A preliminary assessment of today's decisions. The majority rightly struck a blow against the use of racial preferences for purposes of advancing "diversity" in education. But there are some flaws in its reasoning.
Affirmative action becomes harder to defend when it entails discrimination against a variety of racial and ethnic minority groups.
The Little Mermaid was a dull exercise in box-checking. Spider-Verse uses its diverse cast as an opportunity for narrative delights.
Florida's H.B. 999 claims to support "viewpoint diversity" and "intellectual rigor." It does just the opposite.
But DEI administrators' statements have always been pointless and generic
A rogues’ gallery of institutions that anybody with an independent mind should skip.
Amna Khalid and Jeffrey Aaron Snyder argue that we should not kid ourselves about the threat university DEI bureaucracies pose to academic freedom, but is there a better way?
A Princeton phsychologist suggests there is little evidence that corporate DEI programs do much to enhance diversity or inclusion.
Data show that students admitted by lottery to San Francisco's Lowell High School are academically faring much worse than their peers.
Prominent social psychologist and NYU professor calls the requirement “explicitly ideological.”
More universities than ever are now requiring lengthy DEI statements from job applicants. Is that good for academic freedom?
Diversity statements have become common in university admissions and hiring, and that's a problem
New York City pressures Wall Street banks to report "self-identified gender, race and/or ethnicity of individual directors."
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Forget Robin DiAngelo, Ibram X. Kendi, and The 1619 Project. Start with ending the drug war, says the Columbia University linguist.
The New York Times columnist and Columbia University linguist on the "new religion" he says has "betrayed Black America."
Marvel's latest superhero epic is a boring movie about boring people.
A bill touted as banning "critical race theory" in schools would actually ban a huge array of speech around culture, race, and sex, its sponsor says.
Forget Robin DiAngelo and White Fragility. Theory of Enchantment uses popular culture to make workplaces more inclusive and welcoming.
No, it’s not an attempt to monitor faculty and student views. It’s an attempt to make sure they’re allowed to express them.
Regardless of what one thinks about CRT, legislators should not try to suppress ideas in academia
Plus: Rep. Joaquin Castro wants Hollywood to hire more Hispanics...or else, lawmakers inch closer to an infrastructure deal, and more...
A free online conference sponsored by the LeFrak Forum on Science, Reason, and Modern Democracy at Michigan State University.
There’s no reason to fight over the content of your kids’ lessons when you can choose your own.
Plus: Columbia University neuroscientist defends heroin use, Cuomo plan would still criminalize growing or delivering marijuana, and more...
They'll probably do more to lock out indie filmmakers than to advance real inclusion.
The three-day retreat will help 44 top officials "come to grips with the critical questions of racism and inclusion."
The seminar for Sandia Labs executives also involved writing apology letters to marginalized people.
"Well-intentioned efforts to celebrate diversity may in fact reinforce racial stereotyping," say two Carleton College faculty.
The university's litmus test is a lawsuit waiting to happen.
"Controlled choice" is supposed to fix inequality in New York public schools. It might make everything worse.