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Fitch Ratings Predicts More Closures, Mergers

In a report released Wednesday, Fitch Ratings predicted that more colleges will close, merge or significantly restructure operations due to...

There’s No Dissertation Like a Done Dissertation: Academic Minute

Today on the Academic Minute, part of University of Maryland Baltimore County Week: Ramon Goings, associate professor in the language...

Boston College Suspends Swimming and Diving Program

Boston College indefinitely suspended its men’s and women’s swimming and diving program after officials determined hazing had taken place, ESPN...
Patty Goedl, a light-skinned woman with long brown hair, teaches accounting at the University of Cincinnati at Clermont.

Professor Writes Open-Access Textbook to Promote Affordability

Patty Goedl, an accounting professor at the University of Cincinnati at Clermont, spent three years developing her own textbook to mitigate student costs.

Pages of new lawsuits against colleges fly out of a printer atop the U.S. Supreme Court building, all on an orange background

A New Legal Blitz on Affirmative Action

Challenges to race-conscious policies are surging in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling against affirmative action, including a new lawsuit against West Point.

A pay stub showing someone who was paid in experience.

A New Campaign to End Unpaid Internships

Research by NACE shows that paid internships benefit graduates far more than unpaid ones. Now the organization is pushing for legislation to ban the latter.

An illustration of quotes from the Biden administration's letter over a photo of a classroom.

States Underfunded Historically Black Land Grants by $13 Billion Over 3 Decades

The secretaries of agriculture and education have issued letters to 16 governors, urging them to rectify the inequities in funding.

A Glimpse Into the Class of 2027’s Mind-Set

In 2005, the year most of this fall’s first-time students were born, Dan Rather retired, Pandora was created and Hurricanes...