Policy & Legal: Page 57
-
Bill would require accreditors to flag failing colleges sooner
Proposed legislation in the House calls on the agencies to ask for a teach-out plan or agreement if a college doesn't meet certain financial standards.
By Hallie Busta • Oct. 3, 2019 -
Deep Dive
'This is the bust': Colleges tackle the challenge of regional consolidation
As colleges close, budgets tighten and demographics shift, public institutions must address conflicting demands to lower costs and increase access.
By Liz Farmer • Oct. 2, 2019 -
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 -
Judge sides with Harvard in affirmative action admissions case
Although an appeal is expected, the ruling is viewed as a win for colleges that consider race when deciding which students to admit.
By Natalie Schwartz • Oct. 1, 2019 -
Opinion
We all have a lot to learn from nontraditional learners
Higher education is "tethered to a pop-culture archetype" that doesn't reflect today's students, writes Marie Cini, president of the Council for Adult and Experiential Learning.
By Marie Cini • Sept. 23, 2019 -
Q&A
Addressing the 'mismatch' between students' needs and colleges' ability to help
A new project from the Hope Center aims to help colleges better communicate with students about cost while equipping them to be their own advocates.
By Hallie Busta • Sept. 17, 2019 -
U of Alaska System will consider alternatives to merging
The decision came after students and staff decried the system's plans to consolidate and the state agreed to pare back budget cuts.
By Natalie Schwartz • Sept. 16, 2019 -
Just 1 in 3 Americans satisfied with higher ed, report finds
Many respondents to a recent survey from think tank New America said college is unaffordable and the government shouldn't fund poor-performing schools.
By Natalie Schwartz • Sept. 10, 2019 -
Deep Dive
These lawsuits could change the stakes for higher ed
Latest: Eastern Michigan defends its Title IX practices in court documents. Judge pauses case challenging Yale's affirmative action policies.
By Natalie Schwartz • Updated May 28, 2021 -
California's for-profit college crackdown meets resistance
A broad lobbying effort weakened a package of bills put forward in response to reduced federal oversight of the sector.
By Hallie Busta • Sept. 9, 2019 -
Colleges help undocumented students with tailored support and perspective
The Trump administration's use of raids and tighter immigration policies has forced administrators to rethink the services they offer, and how.
By Daniel C. Vock • Sept. 9, 2019 -
Ed Dept pitches foreign gifts reporting tool, but uncertainty remains
Several higher ed groups have said they are in the dark about procedures such as how to submit corrections or handle multiple gifts from a single source.
By Natalie Schwartz • Sept. 6, 2019 -
Report: 'Enormous' affordability gaps at flagship universities
The institutions are responding to state funding cuts in ways that box out low- and middle-income students, a new analysis finds.
By Hallie Busta • Sept. 6, 2019 -
Michigan State fined $4.5 million over Nassar scandal
The university must make several changes to how it approaches campus safety and Title IX reporting following two probes by the Education Department.
By Hallie Busta • Sept. 5, 2019 -
Ed Dept's final borrower defense rule raises bar for claims
The new rules require borrowers to go to greater lengths to prove they've been wronged, and projections show less loan debt will be recovered.
By Hallie Busta • Sept. 3, 2019 -
What's causing fewer foreign students to head to the US?
Tighter visa policies are often blamed, but high tuition and increased competition abroad may also be factors, a new report contends.
By Natalie Schwartz • Aug. 29, 2019 -
Opinion
5 ways to protect your institution’s academic integrity
Reviewing admissions and enrollment processes, particularly for special admits, can help avoid a crisis, writes one risk-management expert.
By Ashley Deihr • Aug. 26, 2019 -
MIT apologizes for accepting $800K from Jeffrey Epstein, vows to review policies
The announcement comes as more institutions are being held accountable for accepting funding from controversial sources.
By Natalie Schwartz • Aug. 23, 2019 -
STEM scholarships for women could face more Title IX challenges
A group that advocates for those accused of sexual misconduct says it may file legal complaints against colleges over gender-specific scholarships.
By Roberto Torres • Aug. 22, 2019 -
DESIGNECOLOGIST. [Photograph]. Retrieved from Unsplash.
Capella U shares lessons from 5 years of competency-based education
The data, which includes challenges and considerations for implementing the model broadly, comes as more colleges adopt or show interest in it.
By Hallie Busta • Aug. 22, 2019 -
Q&A
How colleges can hone their response to ‘flashpoints’ on campus
We spoke with EAB's Jane Alexander to learn where colleges go wrong when addressing crises at their institutions and what they should do instead.
By Natalie Schwartz • Aug. 19, 2019 -
California creates higher ed advisory council
The state, which has lacked such a group since 2011, expects it will help coordinate capacity, transfer and other goals across its three college systems.
By Shailaja Neelakantan • Aug. 14, 2019 -
Report: 'Hypercompetitive' higher ed market will limit revenue growth
A focus on cost containment at regional public and private colleges could spur more consolidation, Moody's analysts note.
By Hallie Busta • Aug. 14, 2019 -
With cuts reduced, U of Alaska opts out of financial exigency
Slashing the cuts by nearly 50% and phasing them in over three years allows the system to restructure "more methodically," said its president, Jim Johnsen.
By Hallie Busta • Updated Aug. 22, 2019 -
Higher ed groups push back on calls to monitor Chinese students and scholars
The FBI's advisory contributes to "a climate of fear and mistrust," said Lynn Pasquerella, president of the Association of American Colleges & Universities.
By Shailaja Neelakantan • Aug. 13, 2019 -
Does free college come with trade-offs?
A new report from the American Enterprise Institute examines the relationship between government subsidies and higher ed attainment and resources.
By Shailaja Neelakantan • Aug. 12, 2019