It may be a sweltering August day in the Deep South, but football fans across the region are readying their R.V.s and face paint, making plans for the tailgate feast and nervously reading injury reports on their team’s star players as they prepare for the opening of the college football season. More...
After Charlottesville violence, colleges brace for more clashes
So beginning this semester, student groups hosting large events are required to inform the college at least eight weeks in advance, so it has time to prepare a security plan. More...
Lack of broadband hurts higher ed in rural areas
Some 680,000 Floridians do not have access to a broadband internet service that would allow information to be downloaded at minimum speed of 25 megabits per second, according to the report presented Monday to the state Higher Education Coordinating Council. More...
Hundreds carry lit candles across U.Va. campus against white nationalism
Hundreds of people marched with lit candles across the University of Virginia campus Wednesday night in a contrasting demonstration from the torchlight white nationalist parade last Friday night. More...
Solving common challenges for students and the community
Generating new sources of revenue, promoting the institutional brand, simplifying the student experience and supporting the regional community: These are all priorities institutional and divisional leaders are grappling with every day at colleges and universities across the United States. More...
Five years in, what's next for DACA?
Demonstrators came from across the country to gather at the White House in support of undocumented immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as toddlers and children. More...
Cleveland Cannabis College curriculum expanding this fall
A year shy of Ohio’s medical marijuana program becoming operational, Cleveland Cannabis College is expanding its curriculum in the hopes of helping to fill the thousands of jobs that could be created with the budding industry. More...
Why has Mexico's education revolution failed?
They are counting down the minutes until break time, when they will be given a small portion of beans with tortillas – for some, the only meal they will eat today (Mexico’s schooling is split into two distinct shifts; these children study from 1.30-6pm). More...
Caution needed on college closures
The higher education landscape in New Mexico is witnessing dramatic changes, forcing universities and colleges to adapt through innovative solutions or risk the possibility of becoming obsolete. More...
Staying in college is harder than ever, experts say
However difficult getting into college may have been, it turns out, that may have been the easiest part of the transition to college life, admissions officials say. More...