Inside Higher Ed's News

Earlier News

February 22, 2021
The University of Oregon's student government voted to end financial contributions, by way of student fees, to the athletics department. They want the money used instead to help students who are struggling financially.

February 22, 2021
Pacific University allegedly urged a professor to resign, saying he'd be found responsible for sexual misconduct if he didn't.

February 22, 2021
James Kvaal, a key player in the Obama administration's policies, who has called for tougher scrutiny of for-profit institutions, has been nominated to be the Biden administration's education under secretary.

February 22, 2021
Colorado School of Mines is starting a major in quantitative biosciences and engineering. Dickinson College is starting an online master's program in managing complex disasters. Linfield University is starting an M.S. in business.

February 19, 2021
How Lehigh University dealt with a professor's uncomfortable commentary involving race and poverty.

February 19, 2021
Endowments post lowest returns since 2016, but the slide isn't enough to keep 10-year averages from hitting a target.

February 19, 2021
As vaccinations continue, colleges and universities announce plans for more in-person instruction this fall.

February 19, 2021
A year after many campuses transitioned to remote instruction, blind students continue to encounter barriers that undermine their learning.

February 18, 2021
President says his plan to support free public higher education will make a difference to future students.

February 18, 2021
Cases are going up at colleges and universities, despite more testing. Some colleges have put in place tight restrictions. Others have been more flexible.

February 18, 2021
Faculty members who saw the shift to online learning as an opportunity were less likely to feel burned out or receive poor ratings on their teaching.

February 18, 2021
First-time international graduate enrollments plummeted last fall, but substantial numbers of students deferred admission, according to a new survey from the Council of Graduate Schools.

February 18, 2021
Government proposes system to assure free speech, but faculty and student groups object.

February 17, 2021
New analysis seeks to make sense of what's really going on with respect to gender and other kinds of bias and teaching evaluations. It offers suggestions for meaningful evaluations during COVID-19 and beyond.

February 17, 2021
Research suggests that attackers who disrupted online classes often did so at the invitation and encouragement of students in those same classes -- which instructors need to know if they want to guard against noxious interruptions.

February 17, 2021
Campus closures have stopped COVID-19 testing and vaccinations while some colleges struggle through power outages and burst pipes displacing students.

February 17, 2021
Author discusses her new book on first-generation students and how they navigate college life.

February 17, 2021
Clarkson University Amber Stephenson, health-care management Ithaca College Julie Dorsey, occupational therapy Jessica Dunning-Lozano, sociology Carlos Figueroa, politics Enrique González-Conty, modern languages and literatures Christine Kitano, writing Risham Majeed, art history Megan Martinez, mathematics Brooks Miner, biology Christin Schillinger, music University of La Verne

February 16, 2021
California, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa and Kentucky are looking at spending more on colleges and universities in the upcoming fiscal year. Georgia, Hawaii, Nevada and North Dakota eye cuts.

Pages

Topics

Featured Colleges

Back to Top