The Latest
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UNL faculty blast chancellor’s $1.1M severance payout amid budget cuts
Rodney Bennett unexpectedly announced this week he would step down following a fierce debate over eliminating programs.
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NIH cap on indirect research costs struck down on appeal
The agency announced a 15% across-the-board limit on overhead reimbursement in February, which judges so far have concluded was illegal.
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Martin University will close after short-lived ‘pause’
The university, Indiana's only predominantly Black institution, has faced significant financial and operational challenges in recent years.
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Government abandons RIFs impacting Education Department employees during shutdown
Here's a timeline tracing the Trump administration's efforts to slash half of the U.S. Department of Education's workforce.
Updated Jan. 6, 2026 -
What’s in NIH’s settlement over delayed research funding?
Over 5,000 grants from across the country are covered by the settlement, according to the Massachusetts attorney general’s office.
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DOJ, Virginia AG target in-state tuition for undocumented students
Jason Miyares, who ends his term as state attorney general next week, filed a joint motion with the federal agency after it sued to overturn Virginia’s law.
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Photo by Vlada Karpovich on Pexels
10 stories from 2025 we wish we had written
We’re rounding up some of the phenomenal education reporting we saw last year — from sources other than Higher Ed Dive.
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Trump can order employers to pay extra H-1B fee, court holds
President Donald Trump can impose the $100,000 fine under the Immigration and Nationality Act’s “exceedingly broad language,” a judge ruled.
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Deep Dive
Will higher education researchers leave for opportunities abroad?
As the Trump administration cuts funding to wide swaths of research, foreign countries are ramping up their efforts to recruit top U.S. talent.
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What 3 credit ratings agencies forecast for higher ed in 2026
Fitch Ratings, S&P Global and Moody's Ratings all predicted a tough year ahead, pointing to deteriorating financial conditions and heightened uncertainty.
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Cancellation of mental health grants ruled unlawful
A federal judge required the Education Department to reinstate the grants in 16 states and barred the agency from issuing new priorities for the programs.
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DOJ: Education Department’s race-based grants are unconstitutional
A legal memo said many of the agency’s grants for minority-serving institutions and students from underrepresented backgrounds are unlawful.
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Retrieved from UNC System on December 22, 2025
UNC to require faculty to publicly post syllabi in 2026-27
The 16-campus system has faced conservative-led public records requests this year focused on diversity- and race-related instruction.
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Pomona College considers acquiring Claremont Graduate University
The pair initiated confidential talks in late spring and entered exclusive talks in December to negotiate a definite agreement over the coming months.
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Trump administration appeals ruling in Harvard University case
The federal government seeks to overturn a decision against its previous roughly $2.2 billion freeze on Harvard University's research funding.
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Community colleges are training the next generation of manufacturing workers
Clark State College and Columbus State Community College are among those working with local manufacturers to address regional training needs.
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Retrieved from Christian Brothers University (@FromCBU on Twitter) on December 11, 2023
Christian Brothers University to cut 16 faculty jobs
The Catholic institution recently came off accreditor probation after a long restructuring process and past struggles with enrollment.
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What do college-bound students think of DEI efforts?
The majority of those polled said they either strongly or somewhat want to attend a college that “supports students of all races and ethnicities.”
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Coursera to acquire Udemy to create $2.5B MOOC giant
The companies pointed to their complementary offerings and demand for AI skills training.
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Trump expands travel bans and restrictions to 39 countries
Individuals in Nigeria — one of the countries sending the most foreign students to the U.S. — will not be able to receive student visas beginning Jan. 1.
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Week in review: Trump expands travel ban
We’re rounding up last week’s stories, from Coursera’s plans to acquire Udemy to more cuts at two Catholic colleges.
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Lawmakers say advanced nursing should count as a ‘professional degree’
A group of lawmakers is pushing back on proposed regulatory language that would limit federal student loans for graduate nursing programs to $100,000.
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DePaul University cuts nearly 8% of staff
The Catholic institution is trying to plug an unplanned budget shortfall after a sharp decline of international students and other financial woes.
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Alabama faculty and students file appeal to block anti-DEI law
They contend the 2024 statute violates their First Amendment rights and is impermissibly vague about what speech it prohibits.
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State AGs launch third lawsuit seeking to stop Trump’s H-1B fee
The plaintiffs allege that public colleges, schools and healthcare systems all could be harmed by a $100,000 fee on new visas.