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The Week in Admissions News
University of Missouri system extends test-optional policy; New York fines the College Board for selling student data; Wisconsin approves guaranteed admissions.
![The Maryland state flag flies next to the state Capitol building and a lamppost](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-02/GettyImages-1629828135.jpg?itok=aXt7Hw5Q)
Maryland House Passes Legacy Ban
![Students walk under a canopy of trees along a brick pathway on a campus](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-02/SU_students_campus%20REAL.jpg?itok=s-j5TqiC)
A FAFSA of Their Own
After months of FAFSA delays and missteps, some colleges are sending students homemade aid forms and early offer estimates. That could be a risky gambit.
![Two university students working together in modern student center](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-02/GettyImages-1746601906.jpg?itok=TpP2atki)
What Helps Students Feel Like They Belong?
Research from the University of Illinois finds college students derive belongingness from four factors. Having the cultural capital to navigate higher education matters most to students from racial and ethnic minority groups.
University of Michigan Halts Offers to Sell Student Data to Train AI
![Students walking on the campus of the University of Delaware](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2024-02/University_of_Deleware_GettyImages-1174517121.jpg?itok=cleeuBpf)
Could a Per-Student Tax Alleviate a College Town’s Budget Challenges?
The University of Delaware owns nearly 35 percent of the untaxed property in Newark but is exempt from paying property taxes. City officials want to tax the university $50 per student, per semester.
2 Found Shot to Death in UC Colorado Springs Dorm
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