Innocent until proven guilty not a sure thing at majority of top schools
A new report has found that students' due process rights are no guarantee at a majority of the nation's top schools.
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A new report has found that students' due process rights are no guarantee at a majority of the nation's top schools.
The examples include statements from professors at Yale, Georgetown, and Michigan State University.
While not on the agenda, student debt and graduation rates emerged as focuses of last week's University of Massachusetts Board of Trustees meeting where students offered an olive branch to trustees in a plea to freeze rising tuition rates.
Legal experts challenged the justifiability of the expensive ticket price charged by Yuelu Academy, an institution of higher learning with a history of over a thousand years.
Online education provider unveiled plan to monetize its MOOCs, but observers say real opportunity for edX to grow lies in online program management business.
In 1854, a 26-year-old Chinese man, Rong Hong (Yung Wing), graduated from Yale University.
Stanford University is making changes in how it calculates undergraduate students’ financial aid to exclude the value of home equity, acknowledging that many families may be house rich but cash poor and see college as out of reach.
Health sciences final exam question on gangs, race and graffiti rubs some the wrong way at Cal State Long Beach. Now the professor is under investigation.
The National Science Foundation doled out $10 million to help colleges recruit minority students for STEM.
As the end of the semester approaches, finals season is inevitable for many college students, and to calm students down, colleges and universities are hosting “de-stress” fests, offering students free massages, coloring books, and even a trip to the mall.