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GI Bill Benefits Don’t Pay Off for All
Student veterans who received benefits from the Post-9/11 GI Bill had lower earnings for seven to nine years after leaving the Army, a new NBER working paper showed.
Ep. 46: Defining and Measuring ‘Value’ in Postsecondary Education
Rapid growth in college debt and families’ out-of-pocket expenditures on higher education, along with complaints from employers about the preparedness...

Closing the Great Digital Divide between Students and the University | Thursday, February 25 at 2:00 pm ET
Join this webcast to hear the first-hand experience from Student Affairs and IT panelists working together to bridge the digital...

Groups Ask ‘U.S. News’ to Exclude SAT and ACT Scores
Eleven organizations -- including NACAC -- say removing test scores from rankings is ”simply the right thing to do.”

Study Questions Bias Against Asians in Admissions
If only standardized test scores were used to admit students to the most selective colleges, Asian enrollments would increase by just two percentage points, researchers say.
Understanding the Future of Automated Self-Driving
Lighting and weather conditions can make self-driving cars struggle to see. In today's Academic Minute, part of Widener University Week...

Mixed Report on Test-Optional Admissions
Colleges find significant gains in enrollment of minority and low-income students, but also difficulties in predicting yield.

FAFSA Completion Falls 4.8%
Report says fewer students -- especially low-income and minority students -- are filling out the form.
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