REPORT: Cal State to stay online until 2021
California State University will reportedly operate in a mostly virtual capacity this fall.
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.
California State University will reportedly operate in a mostly virtual capacity this fall.
Scott Galloway, a Silicon Valley runaway who teaches marketing at NYU Stern School of Business, believes the pandemic has greased the wheels for big tech’s entrée into higher education.
The University of South Carolina is refusing to say how a so-called Zoombombing incident violated school policy, or how its threats to punish the perpetrators are compliant with the public institution’s First Amendment obligations.
The Education Department plans to distribute more than $120 million in grants for short-term programs. Which pathways should that money fund?
As unemployment continually climbs following forced shutdowns, university students are suffering from lost internships.
Who will be the winners in the post-pandemic academic job market? Three experts reflect on the skills that will be prized in the ‘new normal’
In recent years, we’ve faced predictions that the best education would soon be totally online and cost nothing. Online learning has only enhanced higher education, not replaced it. Also, it costs someone a fair amount of money to provide. It is not free and never has been.
Is the fight against cheating during remote instruction worth enlisting third-party student surveillance platforms?
Eight of the 14 football-playing members of the Atlantic Coast Conference are making plans for reopening campuses this fall while four others have publicly said they are exploring scenarios for a return following the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic.
A couple law and government professors are criticizing police over a racial disparity among social distancing arrest statistics during the COVID-19 pandemic after recent statistics showed 35 of 40 people arrested in Brooklyn were black, four were Latino, and only one was white.