A College Education on the cheap? Tech start-ups Take onhigher ed
Technology start-ups are cracking into the higher education market and there pitch is an enticing one: A college education for anyone at almost no cost.
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Technology start-ups are cracking into the higher education market and there pitch is an enticing one: A college education for anyone at almost no cost.
Part of the ideal of recruiting foreign students to American campuses is that the friendships formed across international lines will leave those from many countries (including the United States) with new perspectives and personal connections in many nations.
Michigan State University alumni who use their university email soon will lose their accounts if they haven't been a student in two years.
A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit against Yale University by a South Korean university that claimed it lost tens of millions of dollars after Yale damaged its reputation.
Think of it as "Dead Poets Society" meets "The Social Network."
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which has poured more than $4 billion into efforts to transform public education in the U.S., is pushing to develop an engagement pedometer.
Standing at a narrow half-open school gate, two boys in school uniform conduct body searches on fellow pupils and visitors. Another two sit at a table to take down details of comings
When it comes to the internationalization of higher education, the Russian Bear has remained in hibernation.
Sophisticated software holds promise for making the grading of student essays more efficient — and it wouldn’t entirely replace human teachers.
Many parents and the children they send to college are paying rapidly rising prices for something of declining quality. This is because “quality” is not synonymous with “value.”