Democrats unsure how far they can push higher education reform
With a renewed share of power, US Democrats promising help for universities and students confront Republicans and themselves
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With a renewed share of power, US Democrats promising help for universities and students confront Republicans and themselves
Colorado State University pays "eco leaders" $2,000 annually to perform environmental and social justice advocacy on campus.
The numbers are staggeringly low: Only one college in Texas graduated more than 100 African-American men in 2016.
Researchers at the University of California-Berkeley are developing a tool that would utilize artificial intelligence to police online "hate speech."
Rutgers University offers a course, titled “Practicing Social Justice," which teaches “nonviolent confrontational organizing” and “resistance strategies.”
In 2011, then-Texas Governor Rick Perry called on the Lone Star State’s public four-year universities to craft affordable bachelor’s degrees, what the Governor labeled at the time, “$10,000 degrees.”
Some California community colleges are turning down state money for free tuition to avoid participating in the federal loan program.
Harvard University signed a statement in late December denouncing U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen M. Nielsen for a policy limiting the stay of international students in the country
University of Massachusetts at Amherst has come under fire for asking a student to take down a poster from her dorm room that condemned Nazis using profanity, saying it was not "inclusive."
BMC Biology’s ‘portable peer review’ policy aims to save editors and researchers time and effort, but academics question whether authors will want to share details of past rejections