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A graduate student completes coursework on her computer while wearing headphones

Success Program Launch: AI-Supported Clinical Training

Touro University in New York utilizes digital learning tools to provide simulation experiences for social work students taking classes online, helping build their soft skills for working with people.

A hand reaches for the handle of a glass door labeled "Title VI Office"

Penn Creates New Title VI Center. Will Other Colleges Follow?

Opening a center to handle shared ancestry complaints such as those alleging antisemitism is the latest signal that colleges are turning to their Title IX playbooks to comply with Title VI.

Older worker helping younger worker

There Aren’t Enough Internships to Go Around

The supply of available, high-quality internships hasn’t kept pace with demand. Employers say operational challenges and financial worries make them skittish.

Tents of different colors sit on a lawn at Columbia University

Free Speech Survey Signals Distrust and Disconnection

A recent report from FIRE shows that while protests over the Israel-Hamas war are driving campus conversations around free speech, administrators and students aren’t always on the same page about how to respond.

A graduation cap with the words "Financial Aid" sits atop a pile of $100 bills.

Why I Chose to Be a Financial Aid Administrator

Even in this most difficult of years, financial aid is my calling, Steven J. McDowell writes.

Two unidentified students study before class using flash cards

Success Program Launch: AI-Powered Study Tools for Students

A new initiative at the University of Delaware uses generative artificial intelligence to identify key themes and ideas in professors’ lectures, which can be transformed into flash cards and other digital learning tools.

A photograph of West Virginia University's central quad, with Woodburn Hall on the left.

One Year After Massive Cuts, West Virginia Is Still Bleeding Faculty, Administrators

The university courted controversy by slashing programs and laying off both tenured and nontenured faculty members. More spooked professors are leaving in addition to those cuts, but so are key leaders who pushed them.

Judge Challenges Terms of Proposed Settlement on Athlete Pay

The federal judge overseeing the historic antitrust lawsuit governing the compensation of college athletes told lawyers to go “back to...