Policy & Legal: Page 2


  • Education Department launches 18 Title IX transgender athlete investigations

    The new string of investigations into some colleges and schools comes on the heels of a U.S. Supreme Court hearing on the issue this week.

    By Naaz Modan • Jan. 14, 2026
  • Protesters for and against transgender athletes competing in women's sports gather outside the Supreme Court on January 13, 2026 in Washington, DC.
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    Heather Diehl via Getty Images
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    Supreme Court weighs state restrictions on transgender student athletes

    Justices heard back-to-back oral arguments Tuesday over two cases that could determine whether such bans are constitutional. 

    By Jan. 14, 2026
  • 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, coursework and elsewhere.

    By Higher Ed Dive staff
  • Texas Tech University's central quad.
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    Texas just made it easier for students to report DEI, faculty senate violations

    The Students First portal is meant to give "the public easy access to file complaints" about colleges, a new state oversight office said.

    By Jan. 13, 2026
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    Joe Raedle via Getty Images
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    Senate advances bills rejecting Trump’s efforts to slash research funding

    The White House sought cuts of 40% or more at some agencies, but lawmakers from both parties are pushing to hold science spending relatively steady.

    By Jan. 13, 2026
  • A large sign reading "Portland State University" with a grassy, rainy campus in the background
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    Laura Spitalniak/Higher Ed Dive
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    How Oregon’s top higher ed board wants to solve university deficits

    The state's Higher Education Coordinating Commission recommended "institutional integration" and regular audits of academic programs.

    By Jan. 13, 2026
  • The exterior of the Supreme Court of the United States in Washington, D.C.
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    Chip Somodevilla via Getty Images
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    Supreme Court to hear arguments in transgender student athlete cases

    Justices on Tuesday will weigh whether Title IX protects transgender athletes or bans them from participating on teams aligning with their gender identity.

    By Naaz Modan • Jan. 12, 2026
  • Gavin Newsom up close shot.
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    Mario Tama via Getty Images
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    California public colleges would get millions in new funding under Newsom plan

    Gov. Gavin Newsom's fiscal 2027 budget proposal represents a sharp turnaround from last year, when he advocated for big higher ed cuts.

    By Jan. 12, 2026
  • Emily Levine and Mitchell Stevens, both education professors at Stanford University.
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    Natalie Schwartz/Higher Ed Dive
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    CIC Presidents Institute 2026

    3 big takeaways from CIC’s Presidents Institute

    Higher education experts offered insight on topics ranging from how colleges can tackle societal challenges to how they should approach diversity work. 

    By Jan. 12, 2026
  • Connecticut State Capitol
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    Connecticut Democrats pitch plan for state-level graduate loan program

    The proposal aims to fill a $90 million hole left by the Grad PLUS federal lending system, which will end for new borrowers this summer.

    By Jan. 9, 2026
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    How many graduate borrowers will be impacted by the looming lending limits?

    A new analysis finds that roughly 28% of graduate borrowers in recent years have borrowed above the new caps taking effect in July.

    By Jan. 9, 2026
  • Marjorie Hass and Barbara Mistick speak on stage during the Council of Independent Colleges' Presidents Institute.
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    Natalie Schwartz/Higher Ed Dive
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    CIC Presidents Institute 2026

    3 major policy changes college leaders should keep tabs on

    During the Council of Independent Colleges’ annual conference, higher education experts discussed new laws and regulations coming down the pike.

    By Jan. 9, 2026
  • A close up of the hands of someone writing on a clipboard in a scientific laboratory.
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    NIH cap on indirect research costs struck down on appeal

    The agency announced a 15% across-the-board limit on overhead reimbursement in February, which judges so far have concluded was illegal.

    By Jan. 6, 2026
  • A printout application for an H-1B visa is on a table next to a pen and a passport with some cash sticking out.
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    Manjurul via Getty Images
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    Trump can order employers to pay extra H-1B fee, court holds

    President Donald Trump can impose the $100,000 fine under the Immigration and Nationality Act’s “exceedingly broad language,” a judge ruled.

    By Laurel Kalser • Jan. 6, 2026
  • An entrance to a National Institutes of Health building is lit by the sun on a clear day.
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    What’s in NIH’s settlement over delayed research funding?

    Over 5,000 grants from across the country are covered by the settlement, according to the Massachusetts attorney general’s office.

    By Jan. 5, 2026
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    Anna Moneymaker via Getty Images
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    DOJ, Virginia AG target in-state tuition for undocumented students

    Jason Miyares, who ends his term as state attorney general next week, filed a joint motion with the federal agency after it sued to overturn Virginia’s law.

    By Jan. 5, 2026
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    Deep Dive

    Will higher education researchers leave for opportunities abroad?

    As the Trump administration cuts funding to wide swaths of research, foreign countries are ramping up their efforts to recruit top U.S. talent. 

    By Danielle McLean • Jan. 5, 2026
  • A college campus with a building in the background during fall.
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    What 3 credit ratings agencies forecast for higher ed in 2026

    Fitch Ratings, S&P Global and Moody's Ratings all predicted a tough year ahead, pointing to deteriorating financial conditions and heightened uncertainty.

    By Jan. 5, 2026
  • Four different colored backpacks are hanging on hooks on a wall
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    bymuratdeniz via Getty Images
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    Cancellation of mental health grants ruled unlawful

    A federal judge required the Education Department to reinstate the grants in 16 states and barred the agency from issuing new priorities for the programs. 

    By Kara Arundel • Dec. 23, 2025
  • Linda McMahon speaks while seated at a podium.
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    DOJ: Education Department’s race-based grants are unconstitutional

    A legal memo said many of the agency’s grants for minority-serving institutions and students from underrepresented backgrounds are unlawful. 

    By Dec. 22, 2025
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    Retrieved from UNC System on December 22, 2025
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    UNC to require faculty to publicly post syllabi in 2026-27

    The 16-campus system has faced conservative-led public records requests this year focused on diversity- and race-related instruction.

    By Dec. 22, 2025
  • A brick building with many smokestacks sits behind green leafy trees.
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    Maddie Meyer via Getty Images
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    Trump administration appeals ruling in Harvard University case

    The federal government seeks to overturn a decision against its previous roughly $2.2 billion freeze on Harvard University's research funding.

    By Dec. 19, 2025
  • A group of medical professionals walk down the hallway together.
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    Lawmakers say advanced nursing should count as a ‘professional degree’

    A group of lawmakers is pushing back on proposed regulatory language that would limit federal student loans for graduate nursing programs to $100,000.

    By Sydney Halleman • Dec. 18, 2025
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    Anna Moneymaker / Staff via Getty Images
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    Trump expands travel bans and restrictions to 39 countries

    Individuals in Nigeria — one of the countries sending the most foreign students to the U.S. — will not be able to receive student visas beginning Jan. 1.

    By Dec. 17, 2025
  • University of Alabama
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    Alabama faculty and students file appeal to block anti-DEI law

    They contend the 2024 statute violates their First Amendment rights and is impermissibly vague about what speech it prohibits.

    By Dec. 17, 2025
  • Brian Mueller, president of Grand Canyon University, speaks at a podium.
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    Education Department recognizes Grand Canyon University as a nonprofit

    The move ends a six-year spat over the institution’s deep financial and operational ties to Grand Canyon Education, a for-profit services provider.

    By Dec. 15, 2025