Heads up – why tech is in a race for your face
If there’s one thing technology companies learned during the smartphone boom, it’s that getting people locked in early is the difference between success and failure.
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.
If there’s one thing technology companies learned during the smartphone boom, it’s that getting people locked in early is the difference between success and failure.
Income-share agreements are drawing attention from lawmakers, although relatively few students so far have signed up for the loan alternative. Two organizations with markedly different approaches are looking to change that.
HE institutions have offered more than 2,000 places to GSM students, but uncertainty remains over fate of others
Education Department inquiry into Middle East studies program jointly operated by Duke and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill raises academic freedom concerns.
A New Mexico Tech professor has found that both legal and illegal activity at the U.S.-Mexico border are causing a decrease in vegetation cover.
Decreased higher ed market share signals shift in online program management
A robotics company whose creations have amassed millions of views on YouTube, is renting out one of its stars, Spot.
Harvard University recently signed on to an environmentally minded “Cool Food Pledge” in an effort to reduce its carbon footprint.
Federal appeals court rules that the University of Michigan's Bias Response Team might not be able to punish students, but it may still have powers that could limit free expression on campus.
Lack of scholarly freedom in China threatens future progress for its universities and harms overseas partnerships, warns Scholars at Risk