Policy & Legal: Page 110


  • Connecticut senate approves financial aid for undocumented students

    For the second year in a row, state lawmakers have approved financial aid for undocumented students, and the bill is expected to make it through the House this year.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 22, 2016
  • Judge denies CFPB right to demand documents from ACICS

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau had sued the for-profit accreditor after it refused to provide documents for an investigation, but the judge found in favor of the accreditor.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 22, 2016
  • Trendline

    Artificial Intelligence

    As AI continues its forward march in education and the workplace, colleges are grapplling with how best to incorporate the emerging technology into admissions, courrsework and elsewhere

    By Higher Ed Dive staff
  • Desire for international students forces many institutions to weigh revenue vs standards

    As colleges and universities aggressively recruit international students, some faculty have raised concerns that they aren't academically prepared for English-language classes.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 22, 2016
  • Higher ed equity report shows continued gaps in degree attainment

    A 2016 historical trends report finds that, despite gains, the top two income quartiles still earn 77% of all bachelor’s degrees attained in 2014.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 21, 2016
  • Mitchell grades Obama administration 'incomplete' on higher ed

    The U.S. under secretary of education discussed the administration’s policies during the Arizona State University Global Silicon Valley Summit this week.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 21, 2016
  • Marketing could become the most expensive part of higher ed

    Colleges and universities are spending more money on recruitment to cope with increasing competition for students, and it isn’t making their products any better.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 20, 2016
  • What institutions can do for students with serious medical needs

    While students bear the burden of notifying their institution of serious medical conditions, campuses must create an environment where they're comfortable doing so.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 19, 2016
  • Test-optional admissions drawing more diverse applicant pools

    A study for the NACAC found the difference between cumulative GPAs and graduation rates of submitters and non-submitters of standardized test scores to be almost nonexistent

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 19, 2016
  • George Washington U grads sue over online experience

    A class-action suit from graduates of an online master’s program in security and safety leadership argues the program was inferior to its in-person counterpart.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 18, 2016
  • UC-Davis search-scrubbing prompts protests, calls for chancellor's resignation

    The university spent at least $175,000 to suppress negative Google results after video of a campus police officer pepper-spraying students went viral in 2011.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 18, 2016
  • CTE, robots in K-12, and tenure: The week's most-read education news

    Stay ahead of the pack with the latest on a push by 13 state AGs to prevent the ACICS' accreditor recognition renewal and more here.

    By Roger Riddell • April 15, 2016
  • More students successfully sue following sexual assault cases

    At least 10 students disciplined for violating Title IX have successfully sued institutions in the last year, arguing their due process rights were violated.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 15, 2016
  • States with greater need-based aid have higher grad rates

    A new report links need-based grant aid to better graduation outcomes and persistence rates for low-income students who attend four-year colleges.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 15, 2016
  • Purdue leads with new college financing option for students

    The university will be among the first to offer financing plans that allow students to pledge a portion of future income to supplement federal loans and grant aid.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 14, 2016
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    As many as 80% of students could be pirating learning materials

    A multi-country research project asked students about their behaviors and attitudes toward piracy, finding just one in five acquired all class materials legally.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 14, 2016
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    Serving autistic students presents a challenge in higher ed, too

    Institutions can accommodate students on the autism spectrum by limiting sensory distractions in class design and keeping their needs in mind with teaching.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 14, 2016
  • Review finds Ed Dept's accreditor audits lacking

    The Center for American Progress suggests annual audits and program review processes must be restructured to achieve meaningful oversight.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 14, 2016
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    Deep Dive

    Tenure is disappearing, much to the detriment of higher ed

    Schools with a greater reliance on adjunct faculty have lower graduation and retention rates, among other consequences.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 13, 2016
  • Helping students make college decisions only gets them so far

    For students living in 'education deserts,' the best info about how and where to apply doesn’t help them avoid the only open-access institution close to home.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 13, 2016
  • UW-Madison chancellor commits to protecting tenured faculty

    Chancellor Rebecca Blank says faculty are safe from layoffs, but faculty members are not so sure of their futures.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 12, 2016
  • What's the best way to fix higher ed funding?

    New America has laid out a plan to make debt-free college possible, positioning its solution into a number of other policy proposals floated recently.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 12, 2016
  • Deep Dive

    More colleges developing holistic supports for student financial wellness

    A growing interest in student financial wellness, beyond just student loans, comes at at time when financial responsibility among students seems to be declining.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 11, 2016
  • New journal edition highlights studies of higher ed effectiveness

    The latest issue of the Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences examines effectiveness relating to historical objectives, not politicized metrics.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 11, 2016
  • UNC caught in the middle with LGBT 'bathroom bill'

    System President Margaret Spellings told chancellors their institutions had to comply with the law, though she said this was not an endorsement.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 11, 2016
  • 13 attorneys general oppose ACICS accreditation renewal

    In a letter to Education Secretary John King and the National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and Integrity, the group made a case against ACICS.

    By Tara García Mathewson • April 11, 2016