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Antoinette "Bonnie" Candia-Bailey, a Black woman with a bald head, wearing a textured jacket and a statement necklace with matching earrings, smiles in a professional headshot.

Administrator’s Suicide Leaves Campus Reeling With ‘Despair’ and ‘Disappointment’

The fallout at Lincoln University of Missouri prompted calls for the president’s firing and raised questions about the treatment of Black women in academe.

Biden Administration Rolls Out Early Debt Cancellation Pathway for Some Borrowers

Students who borrowed $12,000 or less for college and have been paying their loans back for at least 10 years...

Assessing the Lethality of Domestic Violence Offenders: Academic Minute

Today on the Academic Minute: Durant Frantzen, department chair and professor of criminology and criminal justice at Texas A&M University...

$100M Gift Will Build Endowment Pool for 37 HBCUs

The United Negro College Fund, which represents private historically Black colleges and universities, received $100 million from the Lilly Endowment...
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Opinion

Sports Costs Are an Affordability Issue

It’s time to stop saddling students with the out-of-control costs of Division I sports, Michael F. Cavanagh writes.

A magnifying glass inspects a college application over a silhouette of a man with a backpack and a map of the world

Gaming the Student Visa System

As international recruitment markets shift to South Asia, some colleges are swamped with fake applications and last-minute transfers. Is the system too easy to exploit?

A square with rounded corners colored with a changing gradient that starts red and pink on the top left and changes to purple and blue on the bottom right. On this background are the white letters "T," "H" and "E." To the right of the rounded square, black text reads "Times Higher Education."

Is Doctoral Education in the U.K. in Trouble?

While overseas students still flock to the U.K. for Ph.D.s, concerns are growing over weakening domestic demand.

Photo illustration of hands at a keyboard.

When Presidents Plagiarize

Politically motivated plagiarism claims prompted Harvard’s Claudine Gay to resign. Her decision to step down largely follows the trend of other, similar cases.