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A red and yellow discount label, reading "55% Off."
Opinion

Time to Get Real About Tuition

The high-tuition, high-discount model is no longer serving most private colleges—or higher education as a whole, David Bushman writes.

Brandeis, Long Linked to Leonard Bernstein, to End Music Ph.D. Programs

Brandeis University will put its two doctoral programs in music composition and theory and in musicology on hiatus with plans...
Collage of elements from the lawsuit filed against the University of Southern California.

Promising, Then Revoking, ‘Forever’ Alumni Status for Certificate Grads

University of Southern California tentatively settles false advertising lawsuit by graduates of certificate programs, raising issues of how colleges value different students.

A photo of students walking on the UC Santa Cruz campus

UC Santa Cruz’s Admissions Gamble

The university admitted a record number of students this year despite a tight local housing market. But in the end, officials expect to increase head count by only about 730 students.

2 Congressmen Form Caucus to Preserve Historic College Football Stadiums

Two House lawmakers have teamed up to form a new congressional caucus focused on preserving and protecting more than a...

California Drops Effort to Bar Professor as Expert Witness

the California Department of Education is no longer threatening to fine a Stanford University K-12 researcher $50,000 and cut off...
photo of nursing student at Hodges

Another Small College, Hodges University, Will Close

The private nonprofit institution in Florida has seen its enrollment fall by more than half since 2017, and it appeared to run out of runway.

The Week in Admissions News

The Education Department settles with five law schools over financial aid; a new report explores the role of California's Hispanic-serving community colleges; New College of Florida aims to lure students to a new Odyssey course with free books and food trucks.