The political polarization of lawmakers’ views on higher ed may be at an all-time high, but it didn’t come out of nowhere.
Harvard officials enslaved more than 1,600 people from 1636 to 1865, new research released Tuesday shows. Harvard University ...
Planned commencement speakers at Rutgers, Utah Valley and South Carolina State were dropped amid criticism of their past ...
The National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators says institutions could be penalized for decisions they were ...
Although the monetary value of the deal is unknown, Instructure says the cybercriminals have returned the hacked personal ...
The well-funded Alliance for Higher Education has entered the fray to advocate for colleges as essential to democracy. Some ...
The FAFSA Simplification Act, passed by Congress in 2020, has met its goals, with more students eligible for the Pell Grant than ever before and a larger proportion of those students receiving the ...
Lumina and Gallup’s annual survey of alumni shows they are confident about their decision to go to college, but believe the ...
In a Q&A with Anna O. Law, Dominique Baker discusses how the history of migration in the United States impacts the current fight over access to higher education for undocumented students.
Since New Mexico Highlands University president Neil Woolf was placed on paid administrative leave last week, additional ...
The time is clearly ripe for innovation, not just because of the federal policy environment but also economic pressures, ...
New research challenges assumptions about post-traditional learners, finding that older and working students often show ...
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