Filter & Sort
Filter
SORT BY DATE
Order

Majority of Undergraduates Rely on Federal Aid

Around 60 percent of undergraduates used some form of federal financial aid to pay for their postsecondary education during the...

Here’s What Free Community College Might Look Like

Though it’s a challenge to design an equitable tuition-free college program, Democratic policy makers have crafted a proposal that is a good start in resolving the complications.

Emory University Receives $7M Grant for New Law Center

Emory University received a $7 million grant to fund student success and access initiatives and establish the Emory University School...

Former Georgetown Coach Agrees to Plead Guilty

Gordon Ernst, the former head coach of men and women’s tennis at Georgetown University, has agreed to plead guilty in...

In Early Days of Pandemic, Teaching Suffered

Global survey finds that although academics believe they met their objectives, students received a “lower-quality” education.

What Literature and Science Tell Us About Forgetting

We don’t need to remember everything. In today's Academic Minute, Torsa Ghosal of California State University, Sacramento, examines why forgetting...

Judging a Degree by the Program, Not the College

Two new studies examine which degree programs at which institutions offer graduates the best chance of recouping their costs and repaying their loans.

Detailing Last Fall’s Online Enrollment Surge

Number of students studying exclusively or partially online ballooned in fall 2020, especially among undergraduates and at public universities.