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Image of a spigot on the side of the Connecticut state house with money pouring from its opening.

States Disinvesting in Higher Ed: Fact or Myth?

A new Cato Institute report rekindles a long-standing, nuanced debate over whether states have decreased funding for higher education.

U.S. Cautious on India Campuses as Johns Hopkins ‘Begins Talks’

American universities likely to be hampered by restrictions on spending money overseas, experts say.

Exterior details of the Chrysler Building

Wait, a College Owns the Land Beneath the Chrysler Building?

Cooper Union, the New York college working to reinstate its long-standing free tuition policy, is engaged in a real estate battle over one of its most important assets.

Struggling N.Y. College to Sell Off Manhattan Campus

Metropolitan College of New York will sell off all or part of its Manhattan campus as part of a deal...
George Washington and Ben Franklin take grad selfies

State Aid Kept Public Tuition From Outpacing Inflation

With state budgets set to shrink in coming years, colleges may have to look at cutting costs—rather than raising tuition—to stay afloat amid declining enrollment and growing skepticism about the value of a degree.

A trash can full of company logos

Has the OPM Market Already Imploded?

A new report shows institutions are turning away from beleaguered online program managers en masse. Is it the end of the road for a once-thriving sector?

An illustration of two photos of Naropa University's campus combined.

Naropa Sells Main Campus, Betting on Online Future

The university’s space needs have shrunk, so it’s selling its Boulder campus. Officials say the decision will allow growth, but many graduates are saddened by the move.

A senior woman with white hair types on her open laptop in a classroom with younger students in the background.
Opinion

Enrollment Cliff, Meet Longevity Boom

Two major demographic shifts present an opportunity to innovate, Lindsey Beagley, Simon Chan and Kyra Jones write.