Higher education experts and committee members say the plan remains uncertain, adding that a delay could complicate the ...
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office for Civil Rights announced Monday that it’s moving to cut off ...
New SACSCOC president Stephen Pruitt stepped into the job at a time when accreditors are under fire. He has pledged “fierce ...
Across the country, student groups and other organizations are working to fill the gaps left behind by campus centers and ...
Pointing to the slain activist’s inflammatory statements about minority groups, some are pushing back—at their own ...
Philanthropist MacKenzie Scott donated $70 million to the United Negro College Fund last week. The funds will be distributed ...
The wave of faculty firings following Charlie Kirk’s killing is a dangerous development for First Amendment principles, ...
New survey data points to a prevalence of basic needs insecurity among two-year students in California, particularly around ...
The official, Jeffrey Andrade, deputy assistant secretary for policy, planning and innovation, went on to explain that if the government does shut down Oct. 1, the remainder of the session would take ...
Alter will not be allowed to teach classes but will be reinstated without pay, the university told The Texas Tribune. According to Alter’s lawyer, the university will now review Alter’s case using its ...
In a free society, we strive to eliminate the punishments that make discretion a rational choice—and not glorify discretion as a virtue when it is actually a vice.
Cuts to federal TRIO programs would be devastating to students who come from backgrounds like mine, Zachary Jenkins writes.