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Can you make a longer word with each new letter? www.newyorker.com/puzzles-and-...
“Within a few years, a course that used to be appropriate for tenth graders will become the standard 200-level course in many universities across the country,” Jay Caspian Kang writes. Read his other predictions for the future of higher education:
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A theatre professor has begun to fail his students for using A.I. in his classroom. “I’ve stopped being a collaborator in these intro courses and started being a plagiarism cop.”
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“Life being a comedy, of course, you never escape even those folks whose skulls you have imaginatively crushed in your writing.” Hang Ong reflects on cutting ties with his entire family.
www.newyorker.com/magazine/202...
From the daily newsletter: an interview with Sloane Crosley about her reporting on misophonia, a condition that causes sufferers to experience sound as extreme discomfort and pain. www.newyorker.com/newsletter/t...
Over the course of her new memoir, Jill Biden “keeps putting up hurdles for even the most sympathetic of readers,” Amy Davidson Sorkin writes. www.newyorker.com/books/under-...
A sense of make-believe and avoidance pervades Jill Biden’s memoir about her tenure as First Lady, Amy Davidson Sorkin writes. www.newyorker.com/books/under-...
“In boyhood, guilt was a constant companion.” In a new Personal History, Peter Hessler reflects on his first job as a paperboy in Missouri—and his encounters with a particular customer on his route. newyorkermag.visitlink.me/nw95rV
Jay Caspian Kang offers eight predictions for the future of higher education, from the role that A.I. will play to worsening enrollment rates. “This is hardly Armageddon for higher education. But the future does kind of suck,” he writes.
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See today’s Daily Cartoon. www.newyorker.com/cartoons/dai...
“Was it always the case that half of our students would cheat if it were easy enough?”
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I suddenly wondered what had happened to my mother, as if she were one of my characters.
www.newyorker.com
From the daily newsletter: an interview with Sloane Crosley about her reporting on misophonia, a condition that causes sufferers to experience sound as extreme discomfort and pain.