Deep Dive: Page 3

Industry insights from our journalists


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    Colleges dabble in development as high-priced housing markets squeeze their employees

    Local conditions vary, but from Vermont to California, college leaders are seeking ways to make sure their students and employees can afford housing.

    Lilah Burke • June 6, 2022
  • Community members grieve after a shooting in Uvalde, Texas leaves 19 children and 2 adults dead.
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    Brandon Bell via Getty Images
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    'Waiting for the next thing': What it's like teaching after a mass shooting

    Educators are expected to teach through emotional and psychological side effects reaching far beyond communities impacted by tragedies.

    Naaz Modan • May 26, 2022
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    The image by U.S. Department of Education is licensed under CC BY 2.0
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    Colleges twist in the wind with foreign gift requirements in limbo

    Higher education is struggling to understand its current legal requirements, even as Congress debates changes to those laws.

    Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 14, 2022
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    Drew Angerer via Getty Images
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    Free college didn't die with federal inaction. It moved.

    Free college's momentum shifted from the federal level to state and local programs, signaling the movement's durability. How will it change institutions?

    Lilah Burke • April 4, 2022
  • Colleges seek better ways to rename buildings

    Campuses consider policies for renaming buildings as higher ed reexamines who deserves to be honored. Has a shared framework emerged?

    Laura Spitalniak • March 22, 2022
  • North Carolina State Capitol
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    The image by Jim Bowen is licensed under CC BY 2.0
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    North Carolina expands its $500 tuition program. Will it keep paying for it?

    NC Promise adds Fayetteville State, overcoming resistance to lawmakers cutting HBCU tuition. State funding has so far compensated other colleges.

    Liz Farmer • March 15, 2022
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    Susanne Neumann via Getty Images
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    Is $318M enough to fix underfunding at Tennessee's only public HBCU?

    The state's governor is pitching new spending after a report revealed decades of underfunding, but experts say it doesn't go far enough.

    Natalie Schwartz • March 11, 2022
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    dszc via Getty Images
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    Behind U of Arizona's decision to strengthen its ties to its Global Campus

    Faculty members have questions after the university took joint responsibility for the online college's federal financial aid eligibility.

    Natalie Schwartz • Feb. 18, 2022
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    eclipse_images via Getty Images
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    The chess game behind senators' inquiry into OPMs

    Sen. Elizabeth Warren and two other senators asked eight OPMs for information about their businesses, citing concerns about tuition-share deals.

    Natalie Schwartz • Feb. 7, 2022
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    The image by Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, University of Michigan is licensed under CC BY 2.0
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    After U of Michigan president's ouster, faculty seek more empathetic leader

    Mark Schlissel didn't convince campus he was listening. Now he's been fired for an affair with a subordinate. Can the next president change the culture?

    Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Jan. 18, 2022
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    monkeybusinessimages/Getty Images Plus via Getty Images
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    7 higher education trends to watch in 2022

    Politics bleeding into college operations, new regulatory action, continued expansion of online ed and more are stories we'll be following in 2022.

    Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Jan. 4, 2022
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    The image by jpellgen is licensed under CC BY-ND 2.0
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    What happened when one campus flip-flopped on mask mandates

    To faculty, on-again off-again requirements at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville looked like sinking time and resources into pleasing lawmakers.

    Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Dec. 22, 2021
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    Sefa Ozel/Getty via Getty Images
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    Cyberattacks keep targeting colleges. How can they protect themselves?

    Higher ed's sprawling systems mean cybersecurity doesn't come easy — or cheap. But smart strategies and thinking through risk can go a long way.

    Liz Farmer • Nov. 29, 2021
  • New PASSHE Chancellor Daniel Greenstein speaks in 2019.
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    The image by Office of Gov. Tom Wolf is licensed under CC BY 2.0
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    What does a college changemaker do, now that he's gotten what he wanted?

    Dan Greenstein spent nearly three years building toward a merger vote in the Pennsylvania system. Can his administration move from planning to doing?

    Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Oct. 8, 2021
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    Mario Tama via Getty Images
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    Low census counts rattle college towns

    As population tallies roll out, campuses and city halls worry a census interrupted by COVID-19 could choke available public dollars.

    Daniel C. Vock • Oct. 4, 2021
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    Brian Tucker/Higher Ed Dive
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    What student safeguards are needed if Congress expands Pell to short-term programs?

    Recent research found the payoff for short-term Pell offerings varies widely, but some policymakers think they can work with the right precautions.

    Daniel C. Vock • Sept. 27, 2021
  • Trinity Washington University
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    LeMay, Warren. (2018). "Main Building, Trinity Washington University, Washington, DC". Retrieved from Flickr.
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    Surge in pandemic debt forgiveness is about students reenrolling — and also colleges' bottom lines

    Federal relief funding means institutions can target retention and receive a financial boost when forgiving student balances.

    Rick Seltzer • Aug. 11, 2021
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    Permission granted by Laura Peters of CannonDesign
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    Colleges level up healthcare programs to meet growing demand

    Some of the latest expansions have an eye toward interprofessional collaboration and short-term or accelerated offerings.

    Hallie Busta • June 25, 2021
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    Kena Betancur via Getty Images
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    Why SPACs are eyeing the education technology sector

    These "blank-check" companies could expand the industry's footing on Wall Street.

    Hallie Busta • June 25, 2021
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    Spencer Platt via Getty Images
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    International students face a rocky road to campus this fall

    Beyond coronavirus-related restrictions, experts say perceptions of the U.S. as unwelcoming linger, though some institutions will be more affected than others.

    Danielle McLean • June 24, 2021
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    Adeline Kon/Higher Ed Dive
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    How the national test-optional experiment played out at US colleges

    The pandemic accelerated the trend, upending conventions of postsecondary admissions going forward.

    Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Updated June 9, 2021
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    Megan Varner via Getty Images
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    A chancellor search in Georgia highlights the problems of 'partisan capture'

    The state's Republican leaders have a strong hand in the public system's workings — a dynamic observers argue it must break free of.

    Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • June 1, 2021
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    Adeline Kon/Higher Ed Dive
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    The pandemic slowed tuition growth at some colleges. Will it last?

    Sticker prices at several dozen of the country's priciest colleges stalled during the pandemic, our analysis found. But several are raising rates again.

    Natalie Schwartz • May 25, 2021
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    Jon Cherry via Getty Images
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    What colleges can do to counter coronavirus vaccine hesitancy

    Strong uptake of the shots may allow schools to pull back some safety protocols, but getting buy-in on and off campus is critical.

    Danielle McLean • May 10, 2021
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    Wormwood, Matilda. Retrieved from Pexels.
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    What other states can learn from Michigan about serving adult students

    Lawmakers and colleges there have been instituting policies that remove financial barriers for this often-overlooked population.

    Natalie Schwartz • April 16, 2021