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Army Eyes Cuts to Popular Education Benefits

The U.S. Army is considering cuts to two of its education benefit programs, a decision that could impact up to...

After 12 Days, Smith College Divestment Sit-In Moves to Lawn

Pro-Palestinian student protesters at Smith College have ended their occupation of the institution’s central administration building, New Hampshire Public Radio...

UT Dallas to Close Former DEI Office

The University of Texas at Dallas has followed the system’s flagship campus in shuttering its Office of Campus Resources and...
Students in graduation gowns throw their caps into the air.

Degrees Earned Fall Again, Certificates Rise

Fewer people are earning degrees for the second year in a row, but certificates are having a moment, according to a new report.

Proposal to Accredit Fully Online Law Schools Prompts Pushback

A group of law school deans are pushing back against a proposal from the American Bar Association’s accrediting arm that...
An illustration of witnesses who spoke at the FAFSA hearing

‘Game-Changing Crisis’: Lawmakers, Experts Vent FAFSA Frustrations

While one House committee probed the FAFSA mess Wednesday, another grilled Education Secretary Miguel Cardona about the disastrous rollout of the student-aid form.

Paper money falls from the sky against a charcoal grey background.
Opinion

We Should Rethink Performance-Based Funding

States should provide upfront funding for colleges to invest in proven strategies to meet completion goals, Charles Ansell writes.

Library with columns and people on the steps

When FAFSA Completion Takes a Village

In New York City, completion rates for the revamped federal form are down a whopping 45 percent. City agencies, higher ed partners and advocacy groups are pooling their resources to get back on track.