Filter & Sort
Filter
SORT BY DATE
Order
Opinion

Cutting Tuition Is Not a Gimmick

Look at the numbers, writes Robert Massa. A tuition reset can be real.
Opinion

Ethical College Admissions: The Shape of the (Lazy) River

Jim Jump considers reports on steep cuts in tuition rates and big investments in amenities.

An Increasingly Unusual Focus: Low-Income Students

Simpson in Iowa, without a large endowment, will cover tuition for everyone up to family income of $60,000.

The Week in Admissions News

Push for new programs at historically black colleges in Maryland; Christian colleges try to diversify; report on helping low-income students; testing choice for law school admissions.

Job Changes in Admissions and Enrollment Management

New appointments announced at Fordham, Radford, Rosemont, SUNY Purchase, Thiel and Virginia Union.

Does Disaggregation Hurt Asian Applicants?

Asian group tells Common Application to stop giving Asian applicants numerous ways to describe themselves by country of family origin. Other experts on Asian educational issues favor Common App's approach.

An End to Years of Growth for New International Enrollments

Declines are greatest in central-south region that includes Texas. Only New England sees increase.
Opinion

Veterans at Selective Colleges, 2017

Wick Sloane’s annual survey shows that 36 highly selective colleges are enrolling 722 former military service members this fall. That’s more than last year, but still an embarrassment, he argues.