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Shining a Light on Rural Colleges
Two new mapping projects aim to expand understanding of rural colleges and the challenges they face. One focuses on where rural college are located, the other on colleges serving rural populations.
Georgetown Law Places Administrator on Leave After Tweets
Georgetown Law School has placed incoming administrator Ilya Shapiro on administrative leave, pending an investigation into whether he violated the university’s antidiscrimination policy with disparaging tweets about President Biden’s intention to name a Black woman to the Supreme Court.
Biological Essentialism Hurts All Athletes
Isaac Sederbaum responds to a recent Inside Higher Ed opinion piece on women and college sports, citing four major issues with it, including flawed research and bigotry.
Multiple HBCUs Receive Bomb Threats Again
For the second time this year, multiple historically Black colleges and universities across the U.S. went into lockdown and canceled classes after receiving bomb threats.
Emory Replaces Loans With Grants
Emory University announced Monday that it will replace all need-based loans as part of undergraduate students’ financial aid packages, replacing...
Indiana State Enrollment Falls Nearly 25% Since 2019
Indiana State University’s spring enrollment has dropped to 8,541, which is down 11.6 percent from spring 2021, in large part...
The New SAT
Test will be offered in digital format only and will be two hours instead of three, among other changes.
Supreme Court Takes Affirmative Action Cases
It will review decision finding Harvard’s admissions practices to be legal and another that upheld UNC Chapel Hill’s practices.
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