Remove us wellness
article thumbnail

‘They Need Us to Be Well’

The Chronicle of Higher Education

The surprising recipe for building students’ emotional well-being in the classroom? By Sarah Rose Cavanagh The surprising recipe for building students’ emotional well-being in the classroom? Rest and joy — for professors. Rest and joy — for professors.

article thumbnail

Japan PM visits North Carolina branch campus

The PIE News

Japanese PM Fumio Kishida has visited a Japanese branch campus inside a North Carolina university as part of his landmark trip to the US. Speaking about his decision to go to North Carolina during his trip, Kishida said he wanted to “show the Japan-US partnership extends beyond Washington”.

Faculty 109
university leaders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Learn Always: The Power of Saying, “I Don’t Know”

MindMax

The school got back in touch and wanted to work with us. When we asked for feedback on why they didn’t choose us in the first place, the answer was intriguing. That never sat well with me. First, we develop a hypothesis for why something is or isn’t going well. Our solution?

article thumbnail

Leaders Are Readers: Q1 2024 Reading List

Educause

They also underscore the importance of resilience and belonging and explore the relationship between leading well and writing well. Finally, they remind us that the most important leadership lessons often come from students.

article thumbnail

UK government consults on protection measures for universities

The PIE News

UK universities are well aware of the threats of malign actors and the current government approach to foreign interference has been “genuinely helpful” to mitigate further risk, the head of organisation representing over 140 universities has said. This is pretty well understood.

article thumbnail

Ring The Alarm: A Call to Action for Black Women to Address Wellness in the Academy

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Antoinette “Bonnie” Candia-Bailey rings the alarm that our wellness must come first. As we navigate the treacherous waters of 2024, let us honor those we have lost by being mindful of the debilitating structures we are up against. We each have only so much time to do the good work, but work cannot be the totality of our lives.

article thumbnail

Concerns over US visa rejections for African students

The PIE News

International education actors in Africa are uniting with their US partners and activists to call on the study destination’s government to ‘rethink’ visa policies for African students. In the case of the US, Premji noted, students are also expected to personally go for visa interviews besides applying online for the document.

Students 109