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No Paywall for Taxpayer-Funded Research, U.S. Declares

White House mandates free, immediate public access to government-funded research. Many open-access advocates celebrate the decision, but some scholars wonder who will fund the policy.

Bringing Back Stop-Outs

Four University of California campuses are joining forces to boost enrollment by recruiting former UC students who left without completing a degree.

A Focus on Students, Not Their Scores

Lynn University finds that the personal focus of its admissions program works. New student enrollment is up 59 percent in the last 10 years.
Opinion

Affirmative Action Is Probably Dead: Now What?

Antar Tichavakunda and Suneal Kolluri review the options for those who worry about the Supreme Court’s possible decision.

The Week in Admissions News

Waiting for Biden; 10 fraternities disaffiliate from University of Southern California; vulnerable students; students learn to stop overdoses.

Poll: Class of 2025 Politically Divided

Nearly half of incoming college sophomores don’t want to live with or date someone who voted differently from them in the 2020 election, a new poll found.

Wisconsin Considers Direct Admissions

Board of Regents may try to reverse enrollment declines with the alternative to traditional admissions.

The True Cost Faced by Student Parents

A new report shows that student parents from low-income backgrounds must work 50-plus hours a week at minimum wage in order to afford both tuition at a public college and childcare.