Policy & Legal: Page 115
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Successful enterprise risk management policies share ownership institutionwide
Colleges and universities can best address risk by creating institutionwide committees, planning broadly, staying flexible, and incorporating financial planning.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 28, 2015 -
Judge approves Corinthian liquidation plan with $4.3M for student fund
While students initially advocated for a halt to debt collection, the fund will provide money to help them make their case for loan discharges that could total in the billions.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 28, 2015 -
Audit finds more lax oversight by Ed Dept on student loan management
The department let Xerox Education Solutions off the hook for a series of missed deadlines as it worked to fix the student debt management system.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 28, 2015 -
Tennessee Promise attracts thousands more freshmen than expected
While official numbers aren’t available yet, early results show nearly 75% more incoming community college freshmen in the program than projected.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 27, 2015 -
Lawsuit alleges illegal no-hire agreement between Duke, Chapel Hill
An assistant professor of radiology at Duke says she didn’t get a job at UNC because a binding agreement between the two medical schools prevented it.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 25, 2015 -
Cornell president: Higher ed's social responsibility, freedom inseparable
Elizabeth Garrett says looking at higher ed through a lens framed by these two qualities will advance the conversation beyond the same arguments of recent years.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 25, 2015 -
Sponsored by Ellucian
4 Ways Best-Fit Student Recruitment Has Changed
With college applications reaching an all-time high, best-fit student recruitment is a necessary tool to ensure that students' goals align with the mission and values of the institution.
Aug. 25, 2015 -
Northeastern U to pay $2.7M in NSF grant fraud settlement
The settlement is the largest in National Science Foundation history, forcing the university to pay for nine years of mishandling federal research funding for work at CERN.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 24, 2015 -
Arizona 'Save Our Students' group aims for guaranteed funding through ballot initiative
The group’s proposal would force the state to maintain higher ed spending at 2015 levels and cap tuition or prompt a 2% corporate tax increase.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 24, 2015 -
Michigan ed prof argues for FAFSA elimination
In a New York Times column, Susan Dynarski said even Sen. Lamar Alexander’s two-question proposal is made unnecessary by existing IRS tax data.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 24, 2015 -
California may provide look at future of higher ed systems elsewhere
An ambitious higher ed plan has been eroded by a lack of long-term commitment to funding a system that was supposed to have room for everybody.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 21, 2015 -
Presidential power over admissions officially part of UT policy
UT System presidents can now safely overrule admissions decisions in cases of ‘qualified students’ whose enrollment is of high institutional importance.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 21, 2015 -
American Council on Education report urges better calculation of college costs
The report also calls for more research into the implications for college students of costs beyond tuition, like room and board, books, and transportation.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 21, 2015 -
Banks wield significant power over struggling for-profits
As lenders, banks get a say in management decisions and keep their interests at the forefront in decisions to sell or declare bankruptcy.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 21, 2015 -
Lumina Foundation attempts to define meaning of affordability
The foundation's new 'Rule of 10' framework sets a benchmark for how much families should be reasonably expected to pay for college.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 20, 2015 -
DOJ guidance outlines ADA rules regulating service animals on campus
Institutions can't require students to register service dogs or ask questions that get to the nature of a student’s disability, but they do have options.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 20, 2015 -
Ed Dept to create student debt relief committee
Public comment concerning the rulemaking will be accepted through September and the committee will convene in January.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 20, 2015 -
Wright State U provost, two senior leaders fired amid criminal probe
The administrators have been investigated for misconduct relating to revelations that the university sponsored more H-1B visa holders than it employed.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 19, 2015 -
Ed Dept seeks feedback on student medical records guidance
The draft guidance outlines when administrators can and cannot share student medical records during litigation.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 19, 2015 -
Universities, scholars anticipate new era of collaboration in Iran
A negotiated nuclear deal with Iran still needs the approval of the US Congress and Iranian parliament, but optimism is flowing in academia.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 19, 2015 -
Assessing competency-based education in terms of outcomes
Higher ed has long been consumed with access rather than outcomes, but developing metrics for monitoring innovative programs could change that.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 18, 2015 -
NLRB stops Northwestern football players’ attempts to unionize
The National Labor Relations Board decided it has no jurisdiction to rule on whether players may form a union, leaving them with no one to appeal to.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 18, 2015 -
Survey aims to give colleges a path toward improving campus safety
The 32 National Campus Safety Initiative is a free self-assessment tool giving colleges a chance to review policies and compare themselves to peers.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 17, 2015 -
Disruption and Hillary’s higher ed plan: The week’s most-read education news
Fall behind? Catch up on the potential consequences of debt-free college and more right here!
By Roger Riddell • Aug. 14, 2015 -
Are campuses preoccupied with becoming too intellectually safe?
Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt argue in The Atlantic that American colleges are coddling students, failing to foster in them the skills they’ll need for the world.
By Tara García Mathewson • Aug. 13, 2015