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UVA to Pay $9M in Settlement With Families of Shooting Victims

A Contentious Pay Cut at Maricopa Community Colleges
Some of the college district’s adjunct librarians and counselors have been fighting a pay cut intended to bring their wages closer to that of other adjunct faculty.

University of the Arts Announces Sudden Closure
Middle States pulled its accreditation on Friday, saying institution had violated its standards by failing to prepare teach-out plan, among other breaches.

Cardona Pledges FAFSA is ‘Going to Get Better’
Ahead of his Thursday remarks at the Education Writers Association’s national conference, the Education Secretary announced a “full-scale review” of the agency that oversaw the botched FAFSA launch.

‘The Last Straw’ for Weary Financial Aid Officers
Financial aid offices have been overworked and understaffed since the pandemic. Now the FAFSA fiasco has put some in crisis mode.

Colleges Eye Rule Changes in the Wake of Spring Protests
Pro-Palestinian encampments and protests strained college policies this spring. As summer sets in, some are revising rules ahead of a potentially tumultuous fall.
Different Hearing Format for Yale, Michigan Presidents on Campus Antisemitism

New ChatGPT Version Aiming at Higher Ed
ChatGPT Edu, emerging after initial partnerships with several universities, is prompting both cautious optimism and worries.
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