Predatory learning
By Rolph Recto | October 23, 2012For-profit colleges should be more focused on educating students than making money.
For-profit colleges should be more focused on educating students than making money.
Frequent reality TV watchers should reflect upon their viewing decisions.
Newsweek’s switch from the print medium to a digital format indicates changes in economics as well as in readership.
Regardless of year, it is never too late to get involved in University activities.
Cynicism about the state of politics is no reason not to vote.
Sexting highlights the permanent nature of information we circulate via technology.
An education should not merely be measured in jobs and salaries.
Rankings are useful to attract good students, but universities should not be overly concerned with them.
Convicts who have served their sentences should be given the right to vote, in order to preserve the essence of democracy.
The government should eliminate the term “marriage” in order to achieve civic equality for all couples
Providing free birth control is a matter of social equality.
The obsession with college rankings perverts the true purpose of college.
Students should not make a point of complaining about political reality.
The Supreme Court should overturn precedent by ruling that affirmative action merely perpetuates the inequalities it attempts to correct.
A fourth-year trustee offers advice on how to find happiness.
The president of the Fourth-Year Trustees urges reflection on the nature of traditions.
Like every other iPhone that has been invented the iPhone 5 is receiving a lot of attention from the media, which is amplifying the hype for this new piece of technology.
At the risk of seeming compulsive, I come to you again this Monday with commentary on the entertainment world.
Brevity, as Shakespeare had Polonius say, is the soul of wit. Brevity is not the heart of good journalism.
The University population should cease its obsession with image and think of the impact it may have on diverse students.