Those of us who grew up watching Charlie Chan at the Olympics and in Monte Carlo and various other locales were, nevertheless, somewhat surprised to, figuratively, run into the honorable character at the Modern Language Association (MLA) convention, the world’s largest gathering of English professors.
Read the articleYou can find out what they have to do with each other at the Modern Language Association (MLA) conclave of English professors.
Read the articleIntellectuals become quite unnerved when we common folk do our own research in what they call “the Humanities.”
Read the articleSeattle, WA— Those to whom perspiration is part of their actual job might find it surprising that professors view themselves as working in sweatshop conditions.
Read the articleSeattle, WA— Look at what the Modern Language Association wants to digitize.
Read the articleSeattle, WA— At academic conferences, you can get a pretty good idea of trends in higher education not only from the presentations of tenured professors but also from the offerings of Ph.D. candidates.
Read the articleSeattle, WA— One of the remarkable things about college today is the degree to which professors and students engage in activity, that for the cost of admission, they could pursue off campus for next to nothing.
Read the articleHere’s the rest of our arguments for tenure, so far this year.
Read the articleBecause they are so numerous, we have to give them to you in installments.
Read the articleDrawn from the profiles we’ve done of professors so far this year, we offer these pedagogues as proof that tenure doesn’t work.
Read the articleThe one thing that our college guide has in common with the better-known one put out by U. S. News & World Report is that many of the same schools appear on both.
Read the articlePedagogical testimonies indicate that academia remained immune from the wave of patriotism that swept across the country in the wake of the 9/11 attacks upon America.
Read the article