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Students’ Demands for Divestment From Israel Have Mostly Failed
Multiple institutions agreed to consider divestment from weapons manufacturers and others profiting off the war in Gaza. Only a handful have moved toward doing so.

Too Few Middle-Skills Credentials to Meet Future Job Demand
Most providers have to double the number of credentials they produce for well-paying jobs that don't require a bachelor’s to avoid workforce gaps, a new report finds.

E-Textbooks Are More Popular Than Ever. But Professors Still Don’t Trust Them.
Nearly half of professors think students learn better with print materials, according to a new report—but demand from both students and institutions is still pushing them to be more digitally focused.

Report: Generative AI Can Address Advising Challenges
A new report from Tyton Partners encourages institutional leaders and academic advisers to consider the role of generative artificial intelligence to support advising caseloads and course mapping.
State Auditor Finds U of Iowa Manager Diverted $1 Million

A Neglected Transition—the Students Who Stay
Each year, a number of undergraduate seniors choose to re-enroll at their institution to further their graduate education. Helping these learners readjust to their alma mater can boost feelings of belonging.

How Title VI Is Tripping Up Colleges
The Office for Civil Rights has resolved six investigations into how colleges responded to reports of antisemitism. The findings show how those colleges fell short of federal law and hold lessons for the rest of higher ed.

University of Austin Enters Its First Academic Year
The newly minted, hotly debated university, founded by some vocal conservative figures, opened the doors to it first cohort of freshmen.
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