Is Student Debt Forgiveness the Best Way to Spend Billions?
Doing so benefits the better-off without changing the system for the better. On Reason.
Doing so benefits the better-off without changing the system for the better. On Reason.
A tell-all confessional of a writer's time at Dartmouth leaves one reader more skeptical of the writer's claims than the Greek system. On The Wall Street Journal.
Going from six colleges to two institutions has some presidents leaving for jobs in Illinois and New Jersey, or retiring. On Education Dive.
Another tax increase failed to pass in llinois, leaving little room for colleges. On the Chicago Tribune.
The board of trustees has limits on how much they can spend on travel, but the president doesn't and his expenses dwarfed the rest. On WECT.
A webinar on "systemic racism" that questioned its premises received an angry rebuke for raising the issue at all. On the College Fix.
While universities often punish students without respecting their rights, when it comes to athletes, they'll dismiss and ignore evidence. On USA Today.
The debt forgiveness plan being floated will overwhelmingly favor wealthier debtors while setting up more entitlement spending for those at the top of America's economy. On the Daily Signal.
As budget cuts and administrative decisions divide faculty from the institution, college unions have the chance to keep expanding as they have in recent years. On Education Dive.
Men's track and cross-country programs have been on the chopping block as colleges try to cut costs. On Runner's World.