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A sign saying "EBT accepted" sits in the window of a Queens, N.Y., bodega.

How the Farm Bill Could Affect Higher Education

The sprawling package of legislation will be updated this fall. Advocates want Congress to simplify SNAP in the new farm bill. Millions for agriculture research and facilities are also up for grabs.

Students walk on Walsh University's campus in the fall with a steeple topped with a cross in the background.

Catholic Higher Ed Governance In Flux

Catholic colleges and universities are having to revamp their governance structures as their founding religious orders take a step back, a new report says.

A student in a ball cap sits at a laptop with the words "The George and Mary Foster Anthropology Library" on official lettering on the wall behind him, and, on banners below those letters, “You fund displacement why not education?” and “public libraries are not for sale."

UC Berkeley Student Protest Keeps Anthropology Library Open—Kind Of

Student protesters and faculty support dwindled over the nearly three-month occupation of the anthropology library.

Seton Hall University President Steps Down

Seton Hall University president Joseph Nyre is stepping down. He announced the surprise move in a message to the campus...

Bonus Episode: Campus Interview with Montclair State's Jonathan Koppell

In this interview, Montclair State University president Jonathan Koppell talks about accessibility for minoritized groups, the power of creative communication and why he thinks universities need to own their part in the public’s diminishing trust in higher education.

Weekly Wisdom | Interview with VCU President Michael Rao

Get inspired by this incredible conversation about leadership with VCU President Michael Rao.

Paper: Highly Selective Private Colleges Could Diversify Student Bodies by Changing Admissions Practices

A new working paper suggests that highly selective private colleges could change the makeup of their student bodies (and the...