Policy & Legal: Page 112
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Congressional spending bill includes research, Pell funding boosts
The budget Congress agreed on in December includes extra money for research in health, energy, and agriculture along with an increase in the maximum Pell grant.
By Tara García Mathewson • Jan. 11, 2016 -
Deep Dive
6 steps to improving outcomes for men of color at community colleges
The director of San Diego State's doctoral program in community college leadership has advice on how to change low outcomes among black and Latino men.
By Tara García Mathewson • Jan. 8, 2016 -
King upholds California accreditor’s noncompliant status
The Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges has 12 months to get into compliance on every federal standard or lose recognition.
By Tara García Mathewson • Jan. 8, 2016 -
Oklahoma senator questions Ed Dept's legal authority on sexual assault guidance
Sen. James Lankford, chairman of the regulatory affairs subcommittee, sent a letter arguing the department went around regulatory processes, increasing the burden on colleges.
By Tara García Mathewson • Jan. 8, 2016 -
Morgan resigns Tennessee Regents position in opposition to autonomy plan
The chancellor of the Board of Regents will step down at the end of this month, one year ahead of schedule, so as not to implement the governor’s restructuring plan.
By Tara García Mathewson • Jan. 8, 2016 -
DOE to keep students' FAFSA college lists from state agencies, too
The US Department of Education first changed its policy to keep applicants' preferences from individual schools this year, and state agencies are expected to lose access next year.
By Tara García Mathewson • Jan. 8, 2016 -
Council of Independent Colleges panel lists tenure as 'negotiable'
The CIC’s annual gathering featured a draft list of 'essential' and 'negotiable' elements for the future of higher education institutions, and tenure was in the latter group.
By Tara García Mathewson • Jan. 7, 2016 -
Will FAFSA filing changes boost retention?
Utah is hoping the opportunity to file sooner using prior year income and wealth data will provide more clarity as students make college plans.
By Tara García Mathewson • Jan. 6, 2016 -
U of Michigan raises freshman diversity without affirmative action
As the Supreme Court considers a Texas case that could upend admissions policies across the country, one university has forged ahead with its own strategy.
By Tara García Mathewson • Jan. 6, 2016 -
Rash of scandals at U of Louisville may fall back on president
A number of controversies, some directly involving James Ramsey and some not, are making people question his leadership — though he maintains the support of his board.
By Tara García Mathewson • Jan. 6, 2016 -
Mt. Holyoke's Pasquerella to lead AAC&U
Mt. Holyoke president Lynn Pasquerella will replace Carol Geary Schneider as the head of the association in July.
By Tara García Mathewson • Jan. 5, 2016 -
Appeals court sides with U of Hawaii in teacher certification dispute
The university kept Mark Oyama from the student teaching portion of its certification program because of statements he made about children, prompting a lawsuit.
By Tara García Mathewson • Jan. 4, 2016 -
Sun-Times calls for long-term higher ed spending plan
The Chicago paper's editorial board has called for a long-term plan for higher ed investment, chastising lawmakers for using that spending as a safety valve to fix the larger budget.
By Tara García Mathewson • Dec. 30, 2015 -
Deep Dive
5 higher ed trends to watch in 2016
Competency-based education and use of predictive analytics are poised for major growth in the coming year.
By Tara García Mathewson • Dec. 30, 2015 -
Lighting, color critical for students with disabilities
Students with physical disabilities have accommodations enshrined in federal law, but those on the autism spectrum, for example? Not so much.
By Tara García Mathewson • Dec. 28, 2015 -
Free community college and King’s challenges: The 10 most-read Education Dive stories of 2015
With 2016 just over a week away, take a look back at the most popular features, roundups, and briefs of the year.
By Roger Riddell • Dec. 23, 2015 -
NYU spends more than $1M to renovate new president's penthouse
The 4,200-square-foot space, which will serve as Andrew Hamilton’s home as well as a university event space, is getting a major makeover ahead of Hamilton’s arrival from Oxford.
By Tara García Mathewson • Dec. 23, 2015 -
UW-Extension gets approval to grant degrees, to some discord
The Board of Regents for the UW system voted to let the extension program offer its own competency-based degrees, rather than exclusively partner with other UW schools.
By Tara García Mathewson • Dec. 23, 2015 -
Deep Dive
6 books educators should catch up on over the holidays
With a little something for everyone, here's a rundown of holiday reading options to keep on your radar.
By Roger Riddell • Dec. 22, 2015 -
CollegeNET Inc appeals lawsuit against Common Application
The for-profit tech company is continuing its antitrust claims against the nonprofit Common Application, despite a federal judge's rejection last spring.
By Tara García Mathewson • Dec. 22, 2015 -
Montana legislator takes on UM athletic subsidies
State Sen. Dick Barrett wants legislators to know the U of Montana system spends $8.5 million each year propping up its athletics program.
By Tara García Mathewson • Dec. 22, 2015 -
Title IX exemptions used by some colleges to avoid serving LGBT students
A Human Rights Campaign report examined 56 institutions receiving waivers from the anti-discrimination law since 2013.
By Tara García Mathewson • Dec. 22, 2015 -
California community colleges continue to struggle with accreditor
The National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and Integrity voted to limit the ACCJC’s ability to approve four-year degrees.
By Tara García Mathewson • Dec. 21, 2015 -
Deep Dive
Christensen Institute's Fisher: Schools must expand students' social capital
Julia Freeland Fisher recently got us up to speed on disruptive innovation in K-12 and higher ed, from personalized learning to alternative credentialing.
By Roger Riddell • Dec. 18, 2015 -
Cooper Union deal approves charging tuition to ease financial woes
A settlement agreement will let the previously tuition-free school continue to charge tuition as it works on a new strategy.
By Tara García Mathewson • Dec. 18, 2015