The Latest
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Defense Department cuts academic ties with Harvard
The Pentagon no longer plans to sponsor studies of military service members at the Ivy League institution as the Trump administration presses its feud with the university.
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Sponsored by Schneider Electric
How a Texas university uses data to transform campus energy operations
TAMIU advances campus modernization with a strategic operational approach powered by real-time data.
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Opinion
Four ways chief online learning officers can move innovation forward
As demand for online learning grows, these leaders must innovate to ensure digital education keeps pace with the changing needs of an institution, one expert writes.
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Education Department doubles down on anti-DEI efforts
The agency said it would continue to target DEI programs “with or without” a policy letter that set its interpretation of Title VI but was blocked in court.
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The image by ActuaLitté is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0
Federal judge dismisses antitrust allegations against top publishers
Elsevier, Wolters Kluwer, Wiley, Sage Publications, Taylor & Francis, and Springer Nature scored a win for their peer review and submission policies.
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The image by Mrgates is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
Santa Monica College approves dozens of layoffs to target shortfalls
The California public institution is struggling with a persistent structural deficit as well as recent and long-term enrollment declines.
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‘Shifting, false, and nonsensical’: Former Texas A&M professor sues over firing after viral video
Melissa McCoul alleged the university violated her First Amendment rights by succumbing to political pressure to terminate her over her course content.
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The top higher education conferences to attend in 2026
We’re sharing a list of major events to help college leaders and administrators plan their calendars.
Updated Jan. 29, 2026 -
Lawsuit alleges Cornell ‘brazenly’ refused to consider White candidates for faculty job
Diversity, equity and inclusion administrators created an interview list consisting entirely of “minority” candidates, the complaint said.
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The image by Finetooth is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
‘An urgent operational reality’: Southern Oregon University faces looming cash shortfall
The struggling regional institution has seen enrollment decline and is now trying to manage its expenses amid constrained revenue.
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Retrieved from Florida House of Representatives Office of the Majority Leader.
Leadership LedgerFlorida selects another politician to lead a public university
We’re rounding up some of last month’s most interesting college leadership changes, from Montana to Michigan.
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FAFSA completions for class of 2026 outpacing last year’s
The U.S. Department of Education points to an earlier form release date and streamlined user process for the increase in federal financial aid applications.
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Princeton moves to tighten budgets as investment markets slow
More than half of the Ivy League institution's operating revenue comes from endowment income, but lower returns and higher taxes could stymie growth.
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Trump signs $79B education funding bill into law
The fiscal 2026 budget measure will fund the agency through Sept. 30, giving it about $217 million above the prior year’s funding level.
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Michigan free college program boosted adult enrollment, study finds
Community college campuses saw an average increase of 623 students due to the program, which seeks to help eligible adults get an associate degree.
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Duke’s budget and employee cuts called into question by audit
An analysis of the private North Carolina institution’s finances found ample reserves and resources, drawing a rebuke from faculty.
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Penn undergoes another round of budget-tightening measures
The Ivy League institution directed leaders of its schools and centers to reduce “certain expenditures” by 4% amid federal policy headwinds.
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Education Department paid laid-off OCR staff $38M while dismissing most complaints
A report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office found the agency cannot prove the employee cuts improved services.
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Top takeaways for college presidents from AAC&U’s conference
Leaders at the annual American Association of Colleges and Universities meeting shared insights into how they tackle their most pressing issues.
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How 3 college leaders work to boost economic mobility
Three top leaders shared how their public institutions address student needs on diverse campuses.
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Accreditors brace for more change under the Trump administration
At the Council for Higher Education Accreditation’s conference, leaders shared how they’re trying to chart a path forward amid political uncertainty.
Updated Jan. 30, 2026 -
The trends, policies and lawsuits that will shape higher ed in 2026
We’re rounding up our outlooks for the year ahead, with expert insight on what college leaders should be watching.
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Deep Dive
4 policy trends that should be on college leaders’ radars in 2026
From accreditation to civil rights probes, we’re rounding up policy shifts we’ll be watching — and expert predictions on how they’ll unfold — for the year ahead.
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Texas governor pauses new H-1B visas at public colleges
Under Gov. Greg Abbott’s moratorium, colleges have until March 27 to fulfill state data requests about the workers they employ under the visa program.
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Week in review: Navigating ‘relentless’ college leadership roles
We’re rounding up recent stories, from two states targeting H-1B hiring at public colleges to a plan to rewrite accreditation regulations.
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Virginia AG searches for university general counsels to counter ‘federal overreach’
Attorney General Jay Jones is looking for in-house lawyers for three colleges to “fight back” against the Trump administration’s “politically-motivated assaults.”