Keyword: Higher-Education
Higher-Education
has 92.2% among keywords.
BS Score: 9.4%.
Articles analyzed: 1.
Words analyzed: 508.
Analyzed articles
The Daily Caller
- By Amber Duke
- 7/10/2026, 10:00 AM
Pessimism Bias 39.4% - Confirmation Bias 31.5% - Negativity Bias 24.4%
DUKE: The Cheatbot Generation Is Coming For America A professor from Brown University may have created the perfect chart of our civilizational decline. Brown economics professor Roberto Serrano gave his students a take-home exam this spring and was shocked by the unusually high scores. The class had scored an average of 96 percent on the... more
Washington Monthly
- By Christoph Irmscher
- 7/8/2026, 9:00 AM
Negativity Bias 38.8% - Biased Writer Voice 35.7% - Hasty Generalization 18.7%
In June, a huge, eight-sided cage went up on the South Lawn of the White House, obscuring the façade of the storied building President Donald Trump has treated as his personal mansion. Intended for an Ultimate Fighting Championship series of mixed martial arts matches held on the president’s 80<sup>th</sup> birthday, the structure was... more
Daily Kos
- By Capital, Main
- 7/7/2026, 1:00 PM
Negativity Bias 47.7% - Biased Writer Voice 20.2% - Anecdotal 13.7%
By Mark Kreidler for Capital & Main When a faculty group at the University of Southern California voted overwhelmingly to unionize in June, the university cloaked its decision to appeal the result of the election in the most gentle language imaginable, saying it was seeking “much needed legal clarity.” In truth, though, the university... more
The Nation
- By Cate Latimer
- 7/6/2026, 9:00 AM
Appeal to Emotion 15.5% - Anecdotal 14.2% - Appeal to Authority 13.5%
On a dark winter night this past December, a student laid a bouquet of flowers to rest against the Van Wickle Gates at Brown University. Snow quickly dusted the petals, and candlelight glinted against the stems’ plastic wrapping. It is one of many offerings placed at the gates that students ceremonially enter when they begin their time... more
The New Republic
- By Liza Featherstone
- 7/4/2026, 10:00 AM
Politically Left Leaning Bias 50% - Negativity Bias 37.6% - Biased Writer Voice 36.3%
American exceptionalism is an overblown and provincial tradition, but it’s our 250th birthday, so let’s indulge. As The New Republic’s USA 250 series showed—on newsstands now!—the country has gotten a lot wrong, but it’s also gotten a lot right. Here are some of the biggest achievements we can boast about, but which, in the Trump era,... more
The Federalist
- By Joy Pullmann
- 7/2/2026, 11:46 AM
Politically Right Leaning Bias 65.7% - Biased Writer Voice 63.1% - Negativity Bias 45.7%
The Roberts Court just handed down a majority birthplace citizenship decision on the legal level of *Dred Scott* and *Roe v. Wade*. No judge who calls himself an originalist, textualist, or in any way claims dedication to American rule of law could support the 5-4 majority in *Trump v. Barbara*. As the dissents and much other scholarly... more
The Nation
- By Zachary Clifton
- 7/2/2026, 9:00 AM
Biased Writer Voice 37.3% - Appeal to Authority 23% - Ambiguity (Equivocation) 19.4%
Last September, a ceremony like none before it was held at the center of Yale’s campus. The executive vice president of the United States Postal Service, the dean of Yale College, conservative columnist George Will, and the friends and family of William F. Buckley Jr., father of the modern conservative movement, gathered for an unveiling... more
The Conversation
- By Marie-Amelie George
- 6/30/2026, 8:58 PM
Framing Effect 13.1% - Availability Heuristic 7.3% - Negativity Bias 7.1%
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on June 30, 2026, that West Virginia and Idaho did not violate the Constitution by preventing transgender students from joining female sports teams, and that states can restrict who participates on women’s and girls sports teams based on a student’s sex assigned at birth. This ruling, focused squarely on... more
Reason.com
- By Germania Rodríguez Poleo
- 6/30/2026, 12:00 PM
Confirmation Bias 33.3% - Hasty Generalization 15% - Biased Writer Voice 9.4%
In 2005, when I was 11, my mother and I fled Venezuela because the government was going to arrest her for her reporting. She was among the first investigative journalists to document how President Hugo Chávez and the socialist party were taking control of the judiciary and integrating Cuban operatives into the military and security... more
Washington Examiner
- By Kaelan Deese
- 6/27/2026, 10:00 AM
Biased Writer Voice 18% - Ambiguity (Equivocation) 17.3% - Hasty Generalization 16.3%
FORT WORTH, Texas — Just outside the cascading pools of the Fort Worth Water Gardens, a different kind of transformation is underway. Construction crews move between rising buildings. Law students hurry between classes. Texas Business Court judges work inside facilities, literally inside the law school. Across several downtown blocks,... more