The student is now in good standing with the university, according to his lawyer, after a long legal battle after the student was accused of sexual assault by another student. On the Duke Chronicle.
Though for-profit colleges attract the most scrutiny, elite and high-reputation colleges can't back up their claims with good data, either. On Bloomberg.
Though it could be a larger proportion of retirees with college degrees leaving the workforce, fewer college grads have a job and high school graduates have seen better gains. On the New York Post.
Harvard's support of Title VI and federal encroachments on private action undermine its get-out-of-jail-free card. On the Hoover Institution.
Christina Hoff Sommers reviews a book on how Title IX became so dominant. On Education Next.
Changing the borrowing-defense rule and looking into standards for transparency, rather than penalties aimed at for-profits with a gainful-employment rule, has critics up in arms over the Department of Education. On Inside Higher Ed.
Even as state support of higher ed on a per-student basis has increased for five years, colleges continue to increase tuition. On AEI.
Larry Arnn responds to an article critical of his support for and closeness with the Trump administration. On National Review.
A new Duke report chronicles the sins of its past, though Duke didn't take its current form until the 1920s. On the National Association of Scholars.
After UNC self-reported the violation in January, players received suspensions ranging from one to four games, which will be staggered because some players share a position. On ESPN.