Why MBA application predictions look gloomy for U.S. schools in 2022
With an influx of job openings and cost a factor, convincing prospective students to go to business school is challenging. Read more
The world.edu network focuses on education, science, innovation and the environment.
Here you can submit and vote on the best content from the world’s leading organisations and websites.
With an influx of job openings and cost a factor, convincing prospective students to go to business school is challenging. Read more
Black, Latino and Asian American students are less likely to be suspended from school when they have more teachers who share their racial or ethnic background. Read more
The University of California, Santa Cruz, uses much of the space in its former campus bookstore to house a resource center for students with disabilities. Read more
Whoopi Goldberg said this past Monday on The View that the Holocaust was not “about race.” The criticism and outrage cascaded in almost immediately. Read more
It calls for all colleges to release information on student enrollment, persistence, transfer and completion measures for all programs and degree levels. Read more
Due to “administrative support” and “growing student demand,” Yale’s Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies program has added five core faculty in the last year, a 50 percent increase. Read more
Hundreds of thousands of students are missing out on free college aid because they are not completing a pesky federal form known as the Fafsa, a new analysis finds. Read more
Whether you are in the middle of college admissions, halfway through your 2nd semester, alumni, or a local walking down the street to the coffee shop, those college campuses matter. Read more
The Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis hosted an event that made headlines before it even began, called “Is Professionalism a Racist Construct?” Read more
Michael Gove ignored repeated warnings that the “Trojan horse” allegations of an extremist takeover of schools in Birmingham was “bogus” and pressed ahead with divisive interventions, according to evidence revealed in a New York Times podcast. Read more