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Are Rankings Being Rigged (Again)?

Two lawsuits charge that the Rutgers Business School inflated its rank by hiring its own students through a placement company.

Parents Sentenced for Cheating on Son’s SAT

Gregory Colburn and Amy Colburn were each sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Nathaniel M. Gorton to eight weeks in...

Publisher Withdraws Book by White Professor on Black Women

Wipf and Stock Publishers withdrew a book, Bad and Boujee: Toward a Trap Feminist Theology, by Jennifer M. Buck, a...
Opinion

A Partial Lottery for More Equity

The most competitive colleges would benefit if they admitted some students largely by chance, writes Daniel R. Schwarz.

Shawnee State Pays Professor $400K to Settle Pronoun Lawsuit

Insisting a professor call a student by their correct pronouns will cost Shawnee State University $400,000. Shawnee State settled a...
Opinion

Dos and Don’ts for Recruiting Diverse Students

Kerri Shook shares lessons from her research into student perceptions of institutional efforts to recruit racially and ethnically diverse students.

Students Desperately Seek a Way Out of Afghanistan

After nearly eight months of Taliban rule, about 350 students are still stranded at the American University of Afghanistan, unable to get visas out of Kabul, where they fear for their lives.

A Positive Change for a Negative Label

California State University, Fullerton, sought to make students feel less defeated about being placed on academic probation, so administrators banished “probation” from the institution’s official lexicon.