Policy & Legal
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Trump administration court filing may spell end of overtime final rule
The U.S. Department of Labor is still reconsidering the Biden-era effort to expand overtime pay eligibility, according to court documents.
By Ryan Golden • May 6, 2025 -
Trump administration cuts off Harvard University from future research grant funding
The institution “should no longer seek GRANTS from the federal government, since none will be provided,” U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon wrote.
By Ben Unglesbee • May 6, 2025 -
Sponsored by VitalSource
[Podcast] EdTech Evolution
Explore how digital tools are transforming accessibility and engagement in today’s evolving higher ed landscape.
By Higher Ed Dive's studioID • May 6, 2025 -
Deep Dive
Risk-sharing: A ‘well-intentioned’ disaster for colleges?
Experts say a push to make institutions responsible for unpaid student loans could hit hardest on those serving historically underrepresented students.
By Ben Unglesbee • May 6, 2025 -
Kansas State professor sues university for alleged transgender bias
A supervisor at the public institution forced a transgender faculty member to drastically cut short his medical leave for a hysterectomy, the lawsuit said.
By Laurel Kalser • May 6, 2025 -
National Science Foundation caps indirect research costs at 15% for new grants to colleges
The move comes after federal judges blocked similar policies at the National Institutes of Health and the U.S. Department of Energy.
By Natalie Schwartz • May 5, 2025 -
Trump’s FY26 budget plan slashes Education Department programs
The president's proposed cuts would dramatically reduce funding for Federal Work-Study and eliminate all spending on the TRIO program.
By Natalie Schwartz • May 2, 2025 -
Education Department unveils guidance to make switching accreditors easier
The new process could result in colleges changing accrediting agencies with little review into whether they’re trying to evade oversight, one expert said.
By Natalie Schwartz • May 2, 2025 -
Duke University offers buyouts and signals future layoffs as federal cuts hit
Policy changes under the Trump administration could amount to hundreds of millions of dollars in funding losses for the institution.
By Ben Unglesbee • May 1, 2025 -
Senate education panel postpones vote on polarizing antisemitism definition
The bill would require the U.S. Department of Education to use a controversial definition that critics say would undermine free speech.
By Natalie Schwartz • May 1, 2025 -
House Committee on Education and Workforce Democrats. (2025). [Photograph]. Retrieved from Flickr.
House education committee advances sweeping higher ed bill
Republicans say the plan would save $330 billion and spur institutions to lower costs, but Democrats argue it would create barriers to college.
By Natalie Schwartz • April 29, 2025 -
Johns Hopkins University self-funds some research in wake of federal cuts
Faced with grant delays and terminations, the university has created two new programs, partly funded through earnings on its endowment.
By Ben Unglesbee • Updated April 30, 2025 -
Retrieved from Cecelia Alexander.
‘A complete takeover’: Indiana lawmakers pass last-minute college governance overhaul
A proposed state budget would, in part, create post-tenure reviews at public colleges and give the governor full control of Indiana University's board.
By Laura Spitalniak • April 29, 2025 -
University of Pennsylvania violated Title IX, Education Department charges
The agency has been threatening education institutions with the loss of federal funding if they allow transgender athletes to compete in women’s sports.
By Natalie Schwartz • April 28, 2025 -
Federal agency reportedly texts survey to professors asking if they’re Jewish or Israeli
An administrative judge for the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission criticized the move as a “complete overreach.”
By Ryan Golden • April 25, 2025 -
White House declares goal to reach 1M new apprentices per year
President Donald Trump castigated prior investment in higher ed, arguing many programs don't have necessary incentives “to meet workforce training needs.”
By Kathryn Moody • April 25, 2025 -
Michigan promotes college access and skills training for men
The education initiative supports Gov. Gretchen Whitmer’s goal to increase the percentage of Michiganders with a degree or certificate to 60% by 2030.
By Carolyn Crist • April 25, 2025 -
Federal judges deal major blow to Education Department’s anti-DEI guidance
The agency didn’t follow the proper procedures when it issued sweeping guidance threatening federal funding in February, one court ruled.
By Natalie Schwartz • April 24, 2025 -
‘The gatekeepers’: Trump’s action on accreditation sparks concerns over government intrusion
The president signed a directive seeking to punish accreditors for diversity criteria while easing the path for new quality-assurance bodies.
By Ben Unglesbee • April 24, 2025 -
Columbia University vows to remove any future encampments
The Ivy League institution also threatened student protesters with arrest amid reports that demonstrators were planning more encampments.
By Natalie Schwartz , Laura Spitalniak • April 24, 2025 -
NIH prohibits new grant awards to colleges with DEI initiatives
Organizations will have to certify that they don’t have diversity programs that violate federal antidiscrimination laws and that they aren’t boycotting Israel.
By Natalie Schwartz • April 23, 2025 -
Federal cuts are putting university finances at risk, S&P says
While Trump administration policies are pressuring major institutions, many of them have the resources to withstand disruption for now.
By Ben Unglesbee • April 22, 2025 -
The image by Németh Dezső is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
Harvard University sues Trump administration over federal funding threats
The Ivy League institution’s scathing lawsuit accuses the federal government of threatening research “that has nothing at all to do with antisemitism.”
By Laura Spitalniak • April 21, 2025 -
133 foreign students get back their legal status — for now
A federal judge granted a temporary restraining order in the case, one of many contesting the Trump administration’s crackdown on international students.
By Natalie Schwartz • April 21, 2025 -
Minnesota college leaders eye tuition hikes as costs rise and state funding flatlines
Most are weighing an increase of 8%, but one Minnesota State official said even that would not bridge the public system's anticipated budget gap.
By Ben Unglesbee • April 18, 2025