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Students’ Advocates Voice Concern as Education Dept. Amps Up ID Verification
About 125,000 aid applicants will have their IDs checked this summer. The department says the move is necessary to protect taxpayers.
In Reversal, Trump Says Chinese Students Are Welcome
Education Dept. Plan to Send CTE Programs to Labor On Hold for Now
Judge Releases Harvard Researcher After 4-Month Detention

Tennessee Lawsuit Puts HSIs’ Fate on the Line
The state and the group Students for Fair Admissions sued the federal government, arguing Hispanic-serving institutions—as currently defined—are unconstitutional.

Listen: Climate Education Is a New Kind of Liberal Arts
In the latest episode of Voices of Student Success, Clark University’s inaugural dean of the School of Climate, Environment and Society discusses the need for the program and its goals.

Citing Ohio’s Sweeping Higher Ed Law, College Refuses to Sign Union Contract
Central Ohio Technical College said it rejected a tentative agreement because provisions conflicted with Senate Bill 1. Faculty say the institution acted too late and must sign.

Senate Higher Ed Bill Walks Back Some House Proposals
Senate Republicans did not cut Pell Grants and replaced a controversial risk-sharing plan proposed by the House. Higher ed advocates are relieved but wary.
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