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The Debate Over Instructional Spending Policies

A report by the Veterans Education Project argues using instructional spending ratios to measure quality puts nontraditional institutions at a disadvantage -- but others argue that’s not what the metric is for.

Insulting Arkansas? President Resigns in Town-Gown Dispute

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.

Getting Out the Student Vote in an Off Year

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

Judge Orders UC Berkeley to Freeze Enrollment

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.

Removing Barriers for Students With Disabilities

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

Broadening the Right to Sue

Federal appeals court says blind students have broad right to sue Los Angeles Community College District.
Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona, a middle-aged Hispanic man with a goatee wearing glasses and a business suit.

$5.8 Billion in Relief for Disabled Borrowers

The automated process will allow student borrowers with a disability to receive the loan discharges they’re eligible for without having to file additional paperwork.

‘Survivors Can’t Wait’

Petition demands the Department of Education take action by Oct. 1 to undo the Trump administration’s Title IX regulations, given that most sexual assaults occur at the beginning of the academic year.