Disrupting the Enablers
Colleges and universities are expected to pay at least $1.1 billion in 2015 to companies that helped the institutions take their academic programs online.
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Colleges and universities are expected to pay at least $1.1 billion in 2015 to companies that helped the institutions take their academic programs online.
Academics at Christian colleges who believe in evolution (and who believe that doesn't make them any less Christian) have become deeply concerned about the recent move by Northwest Nazarene University to eliminate the job of Thomas Jay Oord, a tenured theologian there.
IT was a simple question: What do you study? But UCLA doctoral candidate Oscar Campos started to give anything but a simple answer
Top colleges have many reasons to avoid enrolling a lot of low-income students.
When the Community College of Philadelphia announced it was launching a tuition-free program for incoming students, the emphasis was on low-income, Pell Grant-eligible families.
Three Penn State Abington student researchers embarked on a journey through medieval China this year, tracing the healing paths of six Buddhist medical monks by painstakingly translating sacred ancient texts.
Starbucks announced Monday that it is doubling the size of its program to provide employees with support for tuition for Arizona State University's online programs.
For a group of Stockton University students, the prospect of the proposed Island Campus at the former Showboat casino is something to fight for.
High school senior Harold Ekeh didn't just get into one Ivy League university. He was accepted into all eight.
The University of Virginia fraternity chapter at the center of Rolling Stone's retracted article "A Rape on Campus" said on Monday that it planned to sue the magazine for what it called "reckless" reporting that hurt its reputation.