Legacy admissions face challenge after affirmative action ban Echoing conservative Supreme Court, coalition of advocacy groups formally demands end to Harvard’s admissions preferences for relatives of alumni By Paul Basken 14 July
Supreme Court notwithstanding, US universities must still collect race data The ban on race-conscious admissions does not override the need to monitor progress in equity and social mobility, says W. Carson Byrd By W. Carson Byrd 13 July
University of California scholars threaten new strike action Just months after ending largest-ever walkout among teaching staff, workers at 10-campus public system complain about unfulfilled promises and arrests By Paul Basken 12 July
AI text detectors ‘biased against non-native English speakers’ Methods used by new tools ‘inadvertently flag’ work written by those who tend to use smaller variety of words and phrases By Tom Williams 11 July
Papers that fail to replicate ‘less likely to be cited’ Scholars suggest reproducibility testing might be helping to self-correct psychological research By Patrick Jack 11 July
US branch campuses in China face uncertain future Geopolitical tensions between two superpowers force institutions to rethink collaborations forged in friendlier times By Liam Knox for Inside Higher Ed 10 July
The tangled worlds of hacking and academia Yale University professor’s new book on history’s most notorious cyberattacks explores academia’s close ties to the world of hacking By Jack Grove 10 July
‘Grave concern’ over NIH’s sweeping foreign research data rules US funder wants overseas partners to share all data and lab notebooks every three months By Ben Upton 7 July
Big data could help mitigate the affirmative action ban It isn’t perfect, but data and analytics could capture the disadvantages applicants face and the diversity they may represent, says Carlo Ratti By Carlo Ratti 7 July
‘Holistic’ admissions may struggle to blunt Supreme Court fallout Experts raise concern that US applicants will be forced to spin ‘sob stories’ about overcoming discrimination By Jack Grove 5 July
‘The fight is not over’ on student debt cancellation – Biden President outlines ‘new path’ towards providing debt relief for as many borrowers as possible By Patrick Jack 3 July
Supreme Court halts Biden student debt forgiveness plan Trump-appointed conservative supermajority rules that $400 billion forgiveness plan stretched intent of emergency relief By Paul Basken 30 June