‘A Sweet Racket’? Yeah, Right
When a misleading op-ed in The Wall Street Journal irks academics, it's time for a fact check on faculty work and pay.
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When a misleading op-ed in The Wall Street Journal irks academics, it's time for a fact check on faculty work and pay.
Minority institutions wary of big candidate promises to lavish them with support
Conservative lawmakers in South Dakota sent a letter to the Board of Regents, slamming the campus diversity offices for promoting “social justice causes.”
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Colleges, schools and even individuals everywhere have fight songs, those tunes listened to for a boost of grit and tenacity.
After the Trump administration dialed back oversight of student loan servicers, states have responded to demands from consumer groups by passing new laws targeting companies that handle millions of borrowers' payments.
The key to maintaining US leadership in science and engineering may rest not primarily with universities’ science and engineering programmes but rather with their schools of education, experts have told Congress.
University of Alaska cuts are just the latest example of what is probably the new normal in US political culture
To help students majoring in artistic fields find employment after graduation without compromising their passions, Texas-Arlington develops unique concentrations with practical applications.
In the name of efficiency, Iowa’s Board of Regents spent $290,000 on a project to help prospective students submit just one application to be considered at all three of the state’s public universities, but few have used it — including just 66 for this fall’s semester.