Inside Higher Ed's News

Earlier News

August 31, 2021
Foundation for Individual Rights in Education says threats against scholars’ speech rights increasingly come from students -- and from the political left.

August 31, 2021
New report from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center finds equity gaps in transfer rates during the pandemic.

August 31, 2021
As the market for women’s colleges shrinks, some institutions have found a niche. But the strategy hasn’t worked for everyone.

August 31, 2021
Colleges in the path of the storm begin assessing damages. Many will remain closed for now in face of widespread power outages. Tulane plans to resume in-person instruction Oct. 11.

August 31, 2021
Ouachita Baptist University is launching a new master of education degree in curriculum and instruction. Trinity Christian College, in Illinois, is starting an online bachelor of social work.

August 30, 2021
W. Joseph King described Lyon as a bubble “of inclusion and diversity surrounded by a sea of angry, disenfranchised populations and a large white-supremacist population.” He’s now out of a job.

August 30, 2021
They thought they were doing the right thing by staying put for their first year of graduate school. Now they’re facing unexpected out-of-state fees from the City University of New York.

August 30, 2021
Western accrediting agency’s new database, tapping into wide swath of federal information, better enables public scrutiny of the performance of the colleges it monitors.

August 30, 2021
Liberty U is under quarantine, Mississippi bars vaccine mandates, Galveston College moves classes online and more.

August 27, 2021
Youth voting soared in 2020. Can student groups and civic organizations keep the momentum going for this year’s state and local contests?

August 27, 2021
The ruling faults the university’s analysis of the environmental impacts of increased enrollment as flawed and orders it not to further increase enrollment above 2020-21 levels.

August 27, 2021
An Australian graduate student writes about what it’s like to be one of the country’s few foreign students.

August 27, 2021
Lesia A. Crumpton-Young, provost and senior vice president for academic affairs and chief academic officer at Morgan State University, in Maryland, has been named president of Texas Southern University.

August 26, 2021
Faculty and staff support the president. But his relationship with several trustees has deteriorated following a failed recall of the board chair.

August 26, 2021
Want students to mask up in class? The University of Texas at Austin has an idea: offer students nonacademic incentives of up to $50 to do so. The caveat? The university isn’t paying for any of it.

August 26, 2021
Community colleges are employing various strategies to attract students this fall and recover from enrollment losses related to the pandemic.

August 26, 2021
A bill supported by Democrats and Republicans would eliminate the costs and burdens that students with disabilities face in accessing college accommodations.

August 26, 2021
Chattanooga State Community College Ian Beck, math and sciences Terrie Breetzke, math and sciences Jonathan Brigner, nursing and allied health Stacey Carter, nursing and allied health Randal Fosse, humanities and fine arts Mindy Griffin, humanities and fine arts Jason Holcomb, math and sciences Kristen Hutton, humanities and fine arts Josh Johnson, humanities and fine arts Eric Niemi, humanities and fine arts Tena Phillips, nursing and allied health

August 25, 2021
Despite a previous claim that NYU was promised “absolute control” over NYU Shanghai operations, NYU Shanghai argued in an employee discrimination case that it is not controlled by NYU and therefore not covered by U.S. employment laws.

August 25, 2021
New report finds most first-year students struggled to learn when the pandemic moved classes online -- in part because of limited access to technology and resources.

Pages

Topics

Back to Top