Breaking With History
Should an HBCU founded by black Civil War veterans shutter its history department, against the recommendation of a faculty committee?
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Should an HBCU founded by black Civil War veterans shutter its history department, against the recommendation of a faculty committee?
Few school districts focus on which colleges and universities post high graduation rates for their students.
Drive through agriculture-rich Central California today, and you'll see a few things: roadside fruit stands, buses hauling porta-potties up to sprawling farms and large groups of workers bent over inspecting produce in the fields.
The Tennessee Education Lottery has closed its Fiscal Year by shattering records throughout the 12-month-period, with an all-time high for sales and proceeds for education.
Teachers and academics in the UK and the US have taken to Twitter to thank Donald Trump's wife for providing the perfect material to teach their students what plagiarism is and why it is wrong.
Forests straddling the equator are critical to a stable climate because they store vast amounts of carbon, and a new study finds that the U.S. and four other developed countries are spending billions of dollars to keep those forests intact.
The European University Association has "strongly and unconditionally" condemned the forced resignation of hundreds of deans from higher education institutions in Turkey in the wake of the failed coup attempt in the country.
Students say colleges should be welcoming to people of all faiths, a new study finds, but their own attitudes toward different groups vary.
Officials are moving ahead with a major revitalization of the Los Angeles River – removing miles of concrete along its banks and re-greening areas now covered with pavement.
Dowling College administrators decided this week to close the Oakdale-based school down for good following on-again, off-again plans to shutter the debt-ridden 48-year-old private institution that’s losing its accreditation next month.