The Power Issue: Renu Khator Is Working Nonstop to Turn a Commuter School Into a World-class University
The University of Houston chancellor can’t stop, won’t stop.
The University of Houston chancellor can’t stop, won’t stop.
The president of Dallas’s Paul Quinn College serves the underserved.
The university implemented sweeping changes after members of Twelfth Woman and others went public with their experiences.
A second-generation Owl argues that his alma mater should consider returning to the days of free tuition.
A report by Texas Appleseed shows that schools are falling back on a zero-tolerance approach that has proven to be harmful to students.
Chancellor John Sharp talks to Texas Monthly about a recent $2.5 billion federal contract that makes A&M accountable for ensuring the nation’s nuclear weapons will work if they are ever needed.
The group chat among Texas Tech students is only the most recent example of the consequences of offensive digital behavior.
Podcast: Andy Langer speaks with the four-star admiral and newly retired chancellor of the University of Texas system about the holiday and the state of our American ideals.
The former University of Texas at Austin president, who takes over from retiring Chancellor William McRaven, discusses the state of the system.
The renowned educator (and native Texan) came out of retirement to lead the historically black university.
Diana Natalicio is believed to be the longest serving president of a public university in the country.
"Any woman in a higher-profile position—women in administrative and supervisory roles, or faculty role models—has a responsibility to pay close attention to these issues, and to take time to listen when students, faculty or staff seek to talk about them."
"When you have companies where women are CEOs, where they really have a hold at the top, it does make a difference. It has changed the culture. Now, you don’t assume that your boss will be playing golf, like the senior vice president that you had 25 or 30 years
"Women need to know what to look for and how to respond. It should really be taught like a life skill: this is how you do a resume, this is how you manage credit cards, this is how you understand sexual harassment and what to do if you’re in that
Budgetary shortfalls have left dozens of students from Nepal in the lurch.
Former state senator Leticia Van de Putte and Representative Diego Bernal discuss the childhood experiences that shaped their priorities for San Antonio’s—and the state’s—public schools.
It looks like Tillerson could be closing in on a new gig.
Abbott and Patrick are bringing the power of incumbency to bear against a Rebellion of educators, business leaders and moderate Republicans.
Guest Column: University of Texas, Trinity University presidents believe the Congressional tax reform bill will limit endowments, student aid.
Guest column: This is a landmark anniversary of the end of race divisions on the gridiron.
A recent grant can help the UTSA team improve their thermal energy-harvesting system.
Guest Column: Thomas Jefferson said no nation can be ”both ignorant and free.”
We talked to the professor who has spent his life researching undocumented youth.
The Texas Lege has provided a temporary fix to a statewide problem in public schools.
Returning to the place where she began her career, Linda Livingstone looks to repair the university’s reputation.
The four-year-old was told not to return until he gets a haircut.
Where the pygmies have gone deaf.
Unsurprisingly, Texas still plays a major role in the fight.
The decision to cancel a White Lives Matter rally could land the Aggies in court.
Students believed the original language in the policy would consider a 9/11 memorial “triggering, harmful, or harassing.”
A key program that has funded struggling school districts expires this year, and school superintendents are bracing for the fallout.
Texas A&M is booming: new construction, world-renowned academics, and sports teams on the rise. The man behind all this success is the pickup-driving, straight-talking politician turned system chancellor John Sharp.
A Longhorn gives the Aggies their due.
He just wants to rock and roll all night, and hook ’em every day.
Texas A&M at Qatar and the Middle East squabble.
Over a year after its removal from the University of Texas at Austin's Main Mall, the controversial Jefferson Davis statue has found a new home on campus.
A federal court rules that a transgender boy should be able to use the bathroom he identifies with.
Democrats and Republicans are turning non-partisan elections partisan.
An on-campus vigil honors the life of the student who died in a tragic stabbing incident on Monday.
On Tuesday, a boy was stabbed at Brewer High School in Fort Worth, and Wednesday two people were killed at North Lake College in Irving in an apparent murder-suicide.
Three people were injured and one person has died following a stabbing on the University of Texas at Austin's campus on Monday.
Vandalism appears around frat houses at the University of Texas at Austin.
A video from the people behind the ”Cocks Not Glocks” protest last August attacks the topic with satire.
Upper chamber’s version of the budget would slice $219 million from higher education.
What a 2003 basketball scandal can tell us about sports culture at Baylor.
The UT Austin president and the director of innovation have a clear desire for a startup focused campus, but implementation is complicated.
Senator Huffines’s outburst to students shows the fervor of the debate.
Public school parents with special-ed kids often find themselves squaring off against school districts and the taxpayer-funded lawyers who protect them.
Property taxpayers will cover sixty percent of school costs. How did it come to this?
Our favorite political reads of the week.