Policy & Legal: Page 28
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Opinion
Gainful employment provides the Biden administration an opportunity to advance the ‘good jobs’ agenda
Education is an invaluable part of a healthy economy, argue policy experts at New America.
By Mary Alice McCarthy and Rachel Fishman • April 17, 2023 -
Two New York institutions permanently shift to test-optional admissions
SUNY and Vassar College each announced this week that they will keep the COVID-era change going forward.
By Laura Spitalniak • April 14, 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 -
Trans, nonbinary state lawmakers criticize Education Department’s Title IX athletic proposal
The plan would prohibit blanket bans on transgender athletes but in some cases could exclude them from sports aligned with their gender identity.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 13, 2023 -
3 state budget trends to watch for higher education
Though legislatures’ budgets are still up in the air, patterns are emerging around college funding.
By Lilah Burke • April 13, 2023 -
Title IX athletic rule could be finalized in May
The proposal would prohibit blanket bans of transgender students from playing on teams aligned with their gender identities.
By Naaz Modan • April 12, 2023 -
Retrieved from U.S. Department of Education on April 11, 2023
Higher ed leaders chime in on the Education Department’s regulatory agenda
The agency started a series of hearings Tuesday to gather feedback on policy actions in a prelude to negotiated rulemaking.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 11, 2023 -
The image by Wally Gobetz is licensed under CC BY-ND 2.0
Texas lawmakers move forward with proposed bans on faculty tenure, diversity offices in public colleges
Such initiatives have drawn support from high-ranking officials, including the state’s lieutenant governor.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 11, 2023 -
Rutgers faculty go on unprecedented strike
The three unions representing over 9,000 faculty members voted to walk out after almost a year of working without a contract.
By Laura Spitalniak • April 10, 2023 -
The image by Andre Carrotflower is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
Medaille to become part of Trocaire, with both colleges citing enrollment issues
The private nonprofit institutions in New York are set to finalize the merger July 31, pending regulatory approvals.
By Laura Spitalniak • April 7, 2023 -
Retrieved from U.S. Department of Education on April 06, 2023
Education Department proposes regulation that would block explicit bans on transgender athletes
In certain circumstances, however, federally funded schools would be able exclude transgender students from sports matching their gender identity.
By Naaz Modan • April 6, 2023 -
2U sues Education Department over third-party guidance
The OPM alleges the department overstepped its authority and created “an expansive and onerous regulatory regime.”
By Laura Spitalniak • April 6, 2023 -
Appeals court allows remaining Sweet v. Cardona loan forgiveness cases to move forward
Two for-profit institutions and one private nonprofit fought the $6 billion class-action settlement.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 5, 2023 -
House progressives say Biden administration should use executive power to curb for-profit college ‘predatory behavior’
The Congressional Progressive Caucus also wants the White House to withhold federal student aid from poorly performing institutions.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 5, 2023 -
Sexual violence survivor groups ask Biden to ensure final Title IX rule comes in May
The Education Department said it will release its long-awaited regulation next month, but it’s also delayed publishing a draft version of the rule before.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 5, 2023 -
Legislators want short-term Pell — but can’t agree on the details
Congress is considering three proposals that would allow Pell Grants to go toward programs shorter than 15 weeks.
By Lilah Burke • April 4, 2023 -
University of Vermont failed to investigate allegations of antisemitism, Ed Department finds
The university and its State Agricultural College agreed to improve discrimination response protocols, in a resolution agreement entered into with the Office for Civil Rights on Monday.
By Laura Spitalniak • April 3, 2023 -
Louisiana bill would impose annual reviews on tenured faculty
The proposed legislation, from a longtime skeptic of tenure, would also create a tenure rollback procedure.
By Laura Spitalniak • April 3, 2023 -
Opinion
How colleges can work toward diverse classes if the Supreme Court rules against race-conscious admissions
Revisit recruiting and retention strategies, two lawyers suggest.
By Jeff Weimer and Cori Smith • April 3, 2023 -
Ed Department directs colleges to get eligible students on SNAP before expansion expires
Simplified rules for gaining food benefits will rescind shortly after the declared end of the COVID-19 public health emergency on May 11.
By Laura Spitalniak • March 30, 2023 -
Higher ed groups, conservative lawmakers condemn potential religious freedom rollback
The Trump-era rule is redundant and puts excessive legislative burden on the Education Department, according to the agency and supporters of the repeal.
By Laura Spitalniak • March 29, 2023 -
Contingent faculty jobs are still the standard, AAUP report finds
Over two-thirds of faculty positions in fall 2021 did not offer a path to tenure.
By Laura Spitalniak • March 28, 2023 -
Opinion
Government must act fast to protect students and colleges from Silicon Valley’s economic threat
Colleges’ increasing dependence on private-sector ed tech firms leaves them open to risk, says the head of the Student Borrower Protection Center.
By Mike Pierce • March 27, 2023 -
Tennessee legislature passes bill banning TikTok from college campuses
The legislation now heads to the governor, who is expected to sign it into law.
By Laura Spitalniak • March 24, 2023 -
Retrieved from House Committee on Education & the Workforce on March 23, 2023
House lawmakers debate Biden’s student loan system agenda
Republicans tore into the president’s mass debt forgiveness plan and revised income-driven repayment model during a subcommittee hearing.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • March 23, 2023 -
Proposed bill would quash Vermont university’s plan to cut library collection
Vermont State University walked back some aspects of a plan to downsize its libraries after strong backlash.
By Laura Spitalniak • March 23, 2023