Filter & Sort
Filter
SORT BY DATE
Order

How Franklin & Marshall Keeps Enrolling International Students

The college was hurt by the pandemic (as were many), but the international applications are back.

Can Hochul Offset New York’s ‘Age of Austerity’?

Since taking office, Governor Kathy Hochul has championed public higher ed and boosted its funding. For many long-suffering SUNY and CUNY campuses, her support won’t make up for a decade of disinvestment.

OCR Complaints Show Pandemic’s Effects

Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights is investigating more claims about disability discrimination on college campuses as well as allegations of antisemitism as more individuals seek out the office for help.

Trinity International to Go Mostly Online

Trinity International University announced Friday that its undergraduate program in a Chicago suburb will go all online after this semester...

Georgetown Students Demand Stronger Response to Hate

Georgetown University students are demanding tougher investigations of hate crimes on campus, The Washington Post reported. “The frustration has been...

‘Systemic’ Disappeared From AP African American Studies

Drafts of the Advanced Placement course in African American Studies featured the word “systemic” with regard to “marginalization,” as well as with the words “discrimination,” “oppression,” “inequality,” “disempowerment” and “racism.” All of those references were removed from the version of the course released by the College Board this month,
Opinion

Be a Gate Opener, Not a Gatekeeper

We teach students the rules for applying to grad school—but what if we committed, equally, to rewriting the rules that have historically excluded many students, Michael A. Hunt asks.

Nearly 47,000 Have Been in Loan Repayment for 40 Years

Nearly 47,000 people have been in student loan repayment for at least 40 years, The Washington Post reported. The finding...