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‘Rampant Plagiarism’ and ‘Patently Deficient’ Online Education
Staff at a Virginia regulator recommend revoking certificate to operate small college catering to international students after an audit uncovered concerns about academic quality.

A Law School Ventures Into Executive Ed
Loyola Law School, in Los Angeles, starts a series of online certificates aimed at business professionals. In a crowded executive education market, will it find a niche?

Political ‘Litmus Tests’ in Florida
Academics oppose proposed legislation to survey student and faculty political beliefs at public universities.
The Week in Admissions News
Trump's budget; for-profits; income-share agreement.
Bradley U Sorry for Barring Sports Reporter
Bradley University on Friday banned a longtime sports reporter from attending basketball events because he wrote some articles that did...

Cornell, Harvard Drop GRE for English Ph.D.
Move goes against the norm for top-ranked doctoral programs.

The Week That Shook College Admissions
New details on scandal emerge. Coaches lose jobs. Universities hint that some admitted applicants may lose their places. And a few colleges sense a recruiting opportunity.
DeVos Tells Colleges to Drop Arbitration Agreements
The Department of Education on Friday released new guidance on the 2016 borrower-defense rule instructing colleges to drop enforcement of...
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