Policy & Legal: Page 31
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A $400K settlement over misgendering a trans student could foreshadow wave of Title IX clashes
A Shawnee State University faculty member had sued the Ohio public institution over disciplinary action officials took against him.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 21, 2022 -
Report can't determine why thousands of student loans hadn't been forgiven under Income-Driven Repayment
Just 157 loans were forgiven as Income-Driven Repayment was hurt by communication and data failures, the Government Accountability Office found.
By Rick Seltzer • April 20, 2022 -
Trendline
Artificial Intelligence
As AI continues its forward march in education and the workplace, colleges are grapplling with how best to incorporate the emerging technology into admissions, courrsework and elsewhere
By Higher Ed Dive staff -
Ed Dept reviews payments for student loan forgiveness to fix 'forbearance steering'
Changes mean 40,000 borrowers will see their loans forgiven and 3.6 million will have past payments count toward debt clearance, officials said Tuesday.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 19, 2022 -
For-profit coding school BloomTech sued over alleged misrepresented job placement rates
The boot camp, formerly known as Lambda School, has been dogged by allegations it doesn't deliver the education or careers it promises.
By Natalie Schwartz • April 18, 2022 -
Deep Dive
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.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 14, 2022 -
How a recent policy shift at the Ed Department could affect for-profits
For-profit colleges worry recent regulatory actions will discourage investment in the sector, but policy advocates want the federal agency to be even stricter.
By Natalie Schwartz • April 13, 2022 -
Rhode Island bills would tax private colleges' endowments, properties
Municipalities could impose up to a 2% tax on endowments, which would benefit K-12 school districts. Property taxes would go to local general funds.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 11, 2022 -
Opinion
How merger-curious colleges can find mission-aligned dance partners
College leaders have options for M&A processes meeting their fiduciary duty, writes a partner at a group specializing in complex nonprofit transactions.
By John MacIntosh • April 11, 2022 -
15 Republican attorneys general urge Ed Dept to halt Title IX rule change
The attorneys general are threatening to take legal action if the Biden administration issues a regulation protecting transgender students.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 7, 2022 -
Fraudulent student applications targeted Salt Lake Community College
Officials suspect fake applications were an attempt to steal coronavirus relief and financial aid funding. They say they caught on before disbursing money.
By Rick Seltzer • April 4, 2022 -
Opinion
President Speaks: I lead a university becoming a polytechnic. It's possible thanks to public investment.
Tom Jackson Jr. discusses how Cal Poly Humboldt is using $458 million to expand its academic offerings and meet the state's STEM shortages.
By Tom Jackson Jr. • April 4, 2022 -
Deep Dive
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?
By Lilah Burke • April 4, 2022 -
27 senators call on Cardona to change policies on student debt bankruptcy claims
Too often, borrowers must show "a certainty of hopelessness" to have their loans cleared, the lawmakers argue.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 1, 2022 -
Jury finds University of Miami professor has no pay bias claim
The female professor said she inadvertently learned that a male co-worker was paid nearly $25,000 more than her.
By Laurel Kalser • March 31, 2022 -
Groups call for college trustees to learn more about accreditation
"Board members lack a solid understanding of what accreditation is," says a report issued by AGB and CHEA in the face of stress on the system.
By Rick Seltzer • March 30, 2022 -
Watchdog fines loan servicer $1M as feds say more crackdowns could follow
Edfinancial Services said in a new statement it opted to settle with the federal government to avoid "protracted and costly litigation."
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Updated March 31, 2022 -
3 higher ed takeaways in Biden's $88.3B education budget for fiscal 2023
New proposal would hike the maximum Pell Grant, spend more on minority-serving institutions and fund workforce development at community colleges.
By Laura Spitalniak , Rick Seltzer • March 28, 2022 -
MIT bucks trend, revives standardized test score requirement for admissions
The private research university is reinstating the SAT and ACT even as the test-optional movement gains major ground in the wake of the pandemic.
By Natalie Schwartz • March 28, 2022 -
Q&A
This new organization wants to accredit career education
The Workforce Talent Educators Association will focus its quality assurance on outcomes, says its chief accreditation officer and managing director.
By Rick Seltzer • March 25, 2022 -
'No skilled worker left behind': Maryland drops bachelor's degree requirements for thousands of jobs
Almost half of all workers in Maryland are STARs, or "skilled through alternative routes."
By Caroline Colvin • March 23, 2022 -
Ed Dept puts private college owners on the hook for student aid losses
The association representing for-profit institutions said it has "significant concerns" about the policy changes.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • Updated March 23, 2022 -
Intel plans to pump $100M into Ohio and US higher ed
The National Science Foundation will kick in another $50 million to develop research and curriculum initiatives.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • March 22, 2022 -
Yale to settle wellness program opt-out fee suit for $1.2M
AARP, which represented the plaintiff, was previously engaged in a yearslong legal battle with EEOC over the nature of its wellness program regulations.
By Katie Clarey • March 21, 2022 -
Earmarks tally $703M and counting for higher ed
We identified at least 400 line items that will go to colleges across the U.S.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • March 18, 2022 -
What's in the 2022 budget for higher education?
President Joe Biden approved a $1.5 trillion spending package that includes $76.4 billion for the Education Department.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • March 16, 2022