Is your institution approaching the zone of exigency?
When confronted with viability concerns, financial exigency can be a last resort for struggling colleges and universities.
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When confronted with viability concerns, financial exigency can be a last resort for struggling colleges and universities.
Despite legal challenges, the Trump administration’s new Title IX regulations rolling back protections for survivors of sexual harassment and assault at schools and universities went into effect Friday, August 14.
Education experts also weight in key topics including free tuition and the impact of COVID-19 in WalletHub study
The coronavirus crisis has hurt colleges everywhere. But for schools like Ohio University — nonflagship public campuses in Ohio and across the Midwest that were already struggling — it has hastened a reckoning.
Already reeling from the coronavirus pandemic, American colleges and universities now stand to lose hundreds of thousands of international students over the country’s failure to contain the pandemic, the challenges of online learning and a more hostile U.S. government.
MacMurray College, a liberal-arts school with more than 500 students in central Illinois, survived the Civil War, the Great Depression and two world wars. But it could not survive COVID-19.
College, done right, is a life-altering experience with lifelong benefits. But that life-altering experience doesn’t happen for as many people as we’d like to believe.
Going off to college is, for many young adults, their first real plunge into freedom and adulthood. It’s where they’re encouraged to take risks and find new connections in dining halls and laundry rooms.
National Science Foundation's AI Institute for Foundations of Machine Learning will operate at the flagship campus
Professors have asked President Donald Trump’s alma mater to investigate his admittance to the university decades ago based on “new evidence” revealed by his niece.