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A square with rounded corners colored with a changing gradient that starts red and pink on the top left and changes to purple and blue on the bottom right. On this background are the white letters "T," "H" and "E." To the right of the rounded square, black text reads "Times Higher Education."

Dispute Over ‘Woke Ideology’ Causes Schism in U.K. Science Community

The science secretary demanded closure of a UK Research and Innovation inequality committee due to “the sharing of extremist views on social media” by members who she said “expressed sympathy” for Hamas.

Study Uses AI to Review Admissions Essays

A team of researchers at the University of Colorado at Boulder and the University of Pennsylvania have created AI tools...
An illustration depicting a collection of people, in a variety of colors.
Opinion

Why Campuses Need Centers for Pluralism

Now more than ever, colleges must help students learn to cooperate across differences, writes Eboo Patel.

Virginia Foxx, a light-skinned woman with white hair wearing a red top under a black blazer, walks in a hallway.

Reforming Higher Education, One Bill at a Time

House Republicans want a long-overdue update to the Higher Education Act, but they favor a piecemeal approach, starting with how colleges report foreign gifts and contracts.

A Black student studies in a library

Report: PWIs Can Do More to Support Students of Color

A new report from the Education Trust identifies seven ways colleges and universities that are majority white can support students of color and create a positive racial climate.

A street scene of McGill University in Montreal

The Latest on Campus Cuts

McGill University in Canada could cut hundreds of jobs due to projected enrollment losses, while other institutions are weighing much smaller reductions.

An exterior view of the Multnomah University campus showing trees, blue sky and a white building with a steeple.

Multnomah University to Merge Into Jessup University

Years of financial decline made it impossible for Multnomah to continue independently; the two Christian institutions will work “interdependently,” leaders say.

Jane Swift, a light-skinned woman with long gray hair wearing a black shirt, sits at her desk at the Education at Work headquarters in Arizona.

How Jane Swift Is Supporting Meaningful Student Work

In this Q&A, Swift, new president of the nonprofit Education at Work, shares how her organization is working with colleges and corporations to help students gain valuable, and paid, real-world experiences—plus what she thinks career centers and educators must do to better prepare students.