Policy & Legal: Page 2
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Education Department tightens debt relief program for public servants
A new rule will bar organizations deemed to have a “substantial illegal purpose” from participating in the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program.
By Natalie Schwartz • Oct. 30, 2025 -
Deep Dive
The legal debate over Trump’s Title VI campus crackdown
Recent enforcement actions have set off high-stakes arguments about whether the federal government is weaponizing the civil rights law.
By David Weisenfeld • Oct. 30, 2025 -
Explore the Trendline➔
Getty Images
TrendlineArtificial 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 -
Higher ed groups push for colleges to be exempt from $100K H-1B visa fee
The American Council on Education led a letter to U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem that argues these visa holders perform vital work.
By Natalie Schwartz • Oct. 29, 2025 -
The image by Alaska Miller is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
New College of Florida says it will ‘happily be the first’ to sign Trump’s higher ed compact
The public institution has already instituted many policies favored by the Trump administration after it was remade by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2023.
By Ben Unglesbee • Oct. 28, 2025 -
Feds launch site for employers to pay controversial H-1B fee, clarify exemptions
The update answers some of employers’ questions, but the future of President Donald Trump’s restrictions on new skilled-worker visas is still uncertain.
By Ryan Golden • Oct. 28, 2025 -
Private New York colleges get $50M in state financing for capital projects
Since its creation in 2005, the Higher Education Capital Matching Grant Program has awarded $369.8 million to colleges across the state.
By Ben Unglesbee • Oct. 27, 2025 -
‘A fair deal’ or a ‘surrender’? Stakeholders weigh in on Trump-UVA agreement
The Democratic head of the Virginia senate called the agreement a surrender with “significant constitutional problems,” a concern echoed by some faculty.
By Laura Spitalniak • Oct. 24, 2025 -
70% of Americans say feds shouldn’t control admissions, curriculum
The Public Religion Research Institute poll comes as the Trump administration is pressuring colleges to change their policies.
By Natalie Schwartz • Oct. 24, 2025 -
The image by Ken Lund is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0
Michigan State University lays off 99 employees
Along with budget pressures from rising costs, the university has faced dozens of federal grant terminations, leading to another 83 job cuts.
By Ben Unglesbee • Oct. 23, 2025 -
Tracker
Tracking the Trump administration’s deals with colleges
Northwestern University agreed to pay $75 million over three years and make key policy changes to restore roughly $790 million in federal research funding.
By Ben Unglesbee , Laura Spitalniak , Natalie Schwartz • Updated Dec. 2, 2025 -
US Chamber sues White House to block ‘plainly unlawful’ H-1B visa fee
The nonprofit’s lawsuit also alleges the $100,000 fee would render the H-1B program economically unviable for many.
By Ryan Golden • Oct. 21, 2025 -
Gov. Abbott: Texas is targeting professors over ‘leftist ideologies’
New laws in the state have dramatically reshaped public higher education and coincided with a wave of high-profile faculty terminations.
By Laura Spitalniak • Oct. 21, 2025 -
‘Nothing less than government control’: Higher ed responds to Trump’s compact
Federal officials offered preferential funding treatment to nine initial colleges in exchange for sweeping changes. Here’s how they replied.
By Ben Unglesbee • Oct. 20, 2025 -
Harvard v. Trump
Harvard’s operations lost $112.6M in FY25 amid Trump’s pressure campaign
President Alan Garber called fiscal 2025 extraordinarily challenging for the Ivy League university "even by the standards of our centuries-long history."
By Ben Unglesbee • Oct. 17, 2025 -
Temporary budget deal nullifies Education Department RIFs
Here's a timeline tracing the Trump administration's efforts to slash half of the U.S. Department of Education's workforce.
By Anna Merod • Updated Nov. 13, 2025 -
University of Pennsylvania rejects Trump’s higher education compact
The Ivy League institution became the third college to decline the offer of priority for federal research funding in exchange for sweeping policy changes.
By Natalie Schwartz • Oct. 16, 2025 -
Higher ed groups blast Trump plan to expand applicant data collection
A coalition led by the American Council on Education said the proposal would overly burden colleges and raise student privacy concerns.
By Laura Spitalniak • Oct. 16, 2025 -
Court temporarily blocks overnight ban on expression at University of Texas System
A federal judge found “significant First Amendment issues” in a state law barring all free speech on public campuses between 10 p.m. and 8 a.m.
By Ben Unglesbee • Oct. 16, 2025 -
Brown University rejects Trump’s higher education compact
The Ivy League institution became the second prominent college, after MIT, to reject the deal over concerns about freedom and independence.
By Natalie Schwartz • Oct. 15, 2025 -
Newsom vetoes bill allowing preference in college admissions for descendants of slaves
The California governor contended the legislation was unnecessary, writing that colleges can already determine whether to give such admissions advantages.
By Natalie Schwartz • Oct. 15, 2025 -
Republican lawmakers ask McMahon to restore funding for Hispanic-serving colleges
Members of the Congressional Hispanic Conference pushed back on arguments that the programs discriminate by establishing racial quotas.
By Ben Unglesbee • Oct. 15, 2025 -
Q&A
Antioch University’s president talks leadership and democratic education in uncertain times
Lori Varlotta took the helm of the nearly 175-year-old university this summer as it looks to raise its profile and grow the college coalition it co-founded.
By Ben Unglesbee • Oct. 14, 2025 -
California governor signs Cal State direct admissions program into law
A pilot version of the program proactively offered thousands of students acceptance into the public university system.
By Ben Unglesbee • Updated Oct. 14, 2025 -
MIT becomes first college to reject Trump’s higher education compact
University President Sally Kornbluth said Friday that some of the terms would restrict the institution’s free expression and independence.
By Natalie Schwartz • Updated Oct. 10, 2025 -
Virginia lawmakers threaten state funding consequences if UVA signs Trump compact
Three leaders of the state’s Democrat-controlled Senate urged the University of Virginia to immediately reject the agreement.
By Laura Spitalniak • Oct. 10, 2025