Policy & Legal: Page 23
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How the FAFSA delay could impact colleges and students
The December release could affect institutional staffing, financial aid deadlines and what colleges students attend.
By Danielle McLean • Aug. 28, 2023 -
Deep Dive
Can the farm bill help fix underfunding for HBCUs?
Lawmakers have until the end of September to reauthorize the spending package, which is a significant source of funding for land-grant universities.
By Lilah Burke • Aug. 25, 2023 -
Explore the Trendline➔
MF3d via Getty ImagesTrendlineArtificial 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 -
Retrieved from Kara Arundel/K-12 Dive on January 24, 2023
Education Department settles with 5 law schools that it said improperly distributed financial aid
Institutions including New England Law Boston and New York Law School were accused of expending Title IV money on students in unaccredited programs.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Aug. 24, 2023 -
Florida state colleges must fire repeat violators of anti-trans bathroom law, board votes
The state’s education board passed rules Wednesday mandating workers be fired if they twice use bathrooms that don’t align with their sex at birth.
By Natalie Schwartz • Aug. 23, 2023 -
The image by Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy University of Michigan is licensed under CC BY-ND 2.0
University of Michigan offers striking graduate employees ‘last, best and final’ deal
The graduate student union could ratify the proposal as early as this week.
By Laura Spitalniak • Aug. 21, 2023 -
Will new state definitions of ‘sex’ exclude transgender students?
Four states have enacted laws this year limiting the definition of "sex" to "male" or "female," setting up potential Title IX disputes.
By Naaz Modan • Aug. 21, 2023 -
California community college professors sue over classroom DEI policies
The lawsuit takes aim at documents that advise instructors to avoid inflicting “curricular trauma” on students and define merit as protecting White privilege.
By Natalie Schwartz • Aug. 21, 2023 -
North Carolina restricts transgender college athletes in veto override
A Republican supermajority voted to prohibit transgender women and girls from competing on sports teams aligning with their gender identity.
By Laura Spitalniak • Aug. 17, 2023 -
Federal loans for graduate students on track to outpace those for undergraduates
A new report from the Education Department’s chief economist office looks at how the federal loan landscape is shifting.
By Natalie Schwartz • Aug. 17, 2023 -
Lawmakers urge Education Department to help end legacy and donor admissions
A trio of prominent senators called on Education Secretary Miguel Cardona to take steps like aggressively pursuing complaints against the practice.
By Natalie Schwartz • Aug. 16, 2023 -
House Republicans’ bill would freeze Education Department hiring
Lawmakers characterize it as a first step in returning education policy decisions to the local and state levels.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Aug. 16, 2023 -
Retrieved from Facebook on August 15, 2023
Alderson Broaddus hid imminent closure from students and employees, 2 lawsuits allege
The proposed class-action complaints accuse leaders of the Baptist-affiliated institution of breaching contract and fraud.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Aug. 16, 2023 -
The image by Enunnally55 is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
New College group sues Florida over law restricting instruction
The coalition alleges the state's ban on teaching certain subjects has chilled free speech on public campuses and infringes on individual rights.
By Laura Spitalniak • Aug. 16, 2023 -
Here’s the Biden administration’s advice for colleges after the Supreme Court admissions ruling
The Education and Justice departments outlined actions institutions can take to advance equity after the decision on race-conscious practices.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Aug. 14, 2023 -
University of Chicago to pay $13.5M to settle allegations of financial aid price-fixing
The institution, one of 17 named in a class-action lawsuit, will also provide documents that are expected to help the case against the other colleges.
By Laura Spitalniak • Aug. 14, 2023 -
The image by Alaska Miller is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
New College trustees take steps to dismantle gender studies program
A trustee chosen by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis made a motion to explore ending the program, starting with 2024 enrollees.
By Laura Spitalniak • Aug. 11, 2023 -
The MOVEit spree is as bad as — or worse than — you think it is
Colleges and higher ed organizations are among the victim pool of the mass attack, and experts say the worst is yet to come.
By Matt Kapko • Aug. 10, 2023 -
Eastern Gateway ends free college program after battle with Education Department
The agency argued the community college’s program unlawfully charged students who receive Pell Grants more than those who do not.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Aug. 8, 2023 -
Asian American students face tougher admissions odds than their White peers, study says
A working paper found that, even among similarly-qualified students, Asian Americans are 28% less likely to get admitted to selective colleges.
By Laura Spitalniak • Aug. 8, 2023 -
Appeals court blocks Biden’s borrower defense rules
Career Colleges and Schools of Texas, which represents for-profits in the state, brought the legal challenge.
By Natalie Schwartz • Aug. 7, 2023 -
Opinion // President Speaks
President Speaks: With DEI under siege, independent colleges must advance conversations on diversity
Private institutions must step up as politicians attempt to muzzle public colleges on issues of diversity and race, Saybrook University’s leader argues.
By Nathan Long • Aug. 7, 2023 -
Retrieved from PRNewswire on August 04, 2023
Does for-profit Florida Career College have a chance to stay open?
The Education Department revoked the college’s access to Title IV funding earlier this year, usually signaling an institution’s demise.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Aug. 7, 2023 -
Over half of higher ed institutions hit by ransomware paid to get data back, survey finds
Cybersecurity firm Sophos surveyed 200 colleges across 14 countries to find out how they respond to these types of attacks.
By Natalie Schwartz • Aug. 4, 2023 -
The image by Alton is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
Florida ed commissioner says AP Psychology can be taught after all
College Board said last week the course was effectively banned due to the state’s regulations on sexual orientation and gender identity in curricula.
By Laura Spitalniak , Naaz Modan • Updated Aug. 7, 2023 -
Cruz bill would give NCAA power over NIL rules
The legislative proposal would set national name, image and likeness standards and establish that college athletes are not employees.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Aug. 3, 2023