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Income Inequality Drives Up Tuition, Study Argues
A new study shows that income inequality contributes to rising net tuition prices because colleges and universities are incentivized to offer discounts to high-performing, low-income students.
Opinion
A Seat at the Table
The student basic needs movement is growing, writes Christine Wolff-Eisenberg, and librarians should be included in it.
Texas, Rochester Move Online
More colleges and universities have announced that they are moving most or all of their classes online to prevent the...
Planning for the Best of Both Worlds in the Hybrid Workplace
Hybrid workplaces could be the way of the future. In today’s Academic Minute, Drake University’s Alanah Mitchell examines how to...
Remembering Jan. 6
Even if few institutions are commemorating the anniversary, individual scholars and groups say they’re working to keep lessons of the insurrection alive.
Most Colleges Resume In-Person Classes
With the Omicron variant of COVID-19 raging, a majority of institutions are putting their trust in vaccines and tried and true mitigation strategies to bring students back to campus this semester.
University of Florida President to Step Down Next Year
Kent Fuchs, president of the University of Florida, will step down at the end of the year, the university announced...
Bomb Threats at Multiple HBCUs
At least eight historically Black colleges were targeted with bomb threats Tuesday. The threats were unfounded, but students are shaken by the incidents.
Pagination
Pagination
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