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Author: Reporter
?si=sPXB5teJO7wsm71F The Pacific Palisades fire of January 25 destroyed much of that coastal Los Angeles neighborhood, but it somehow spared the Charles and Ray Eames house. Anyone who’s paid it a visit, or at least pored over the many photos of it in existence, knows that it’s more than a preserved work of California modernism once inhabited by a famed pair of husband-and-wife designers. In truth, it’s more like a world, or at least a worldview, made domestic. From the outside, one first notices the clean, vaguely Japanese lines, the sharp angles, and the planes of Mondrian color. Once inside,…
Key points: Schools have seen rising problems with student behavior since the pandemic. For too many K-12 districts, these student behavior challenges are leading to violence against teachers. According to a survey from the National Education Association (NEA) and the American Psychological Association (APA), 80 percent of teachers experienced at least one incident of verbal or threatening violence from students during the 2021 to 2022 school year and 56 percent experienced incidents of physical violence from students. Violence against teachers in the workplace contributes to issues like burnout and some educators leaving the profession altogether. To support teachers in doing…
Higher education is under siege, and not only from the outside. In recent years, colleges and universities have faced mounting external pressure on academic freedom from legislative bodies seeking to ban certain books, restrict curriculum and defund programs deemed ideologically inconvenient. These threats are real and well documented and must be met with a vigorous defense. But in the heated discourse over who is attacking the academy from without, we have been far too quiet about another threat operating from within: the gap between what faculty say they believe about teaching and what actually happens when the classroom door closes.…
Dive Brief: Gifts to U.S. colleges rose to an estimated $78.8 billion in fiscal 2025, a 4% year-over-year increase, according to the latest annual study from the Council for Advancement and Support of Education. Although the increase was “just enough to keep up with inflation,” the growth reflects “continued trust that donors place in educational institutions,” CASE said in its report. Growth was uneven across regions, donor types and other factors. For instance, alumni donors shrank in number even though their total giving increased 10.9%, indicating that a fewer number of donors gave higher-dollar gifts. Dive Insight: The higher education…
Listen to the article 2 min This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback. Institutional members of six higher education associations, along with six private nonprofit colleges, will now have until April 24 to submit extensive applicant and admissions data broken down by race and sex to the U.S. Department of Education, a federal judge ruled Monday. The ruling covers the following higher education groups and colleges: Association of American Universities, which has 69 U.S. members. Association of Independent Colleges and Universities in Massachusetts, which has 58 members. Connecticut Conference of Independent Colleges, which has 14…
Jennifer Kabbany, The College Fix ‘Staff titles have changed, and some diversity programs and offices have been rebranded, but much of UM’s commitment to advance DEI campus-wide remains robust.’
Editors, Washington Post About two-thirds of grades at Harvard College last school year were A’s. That doesn’t count A-minuses, which were another 18 percent, meaning fewer than one in six…
… How do institutions use it strategically? What do these trends imply for public policy? Financial aid for students without financial need: Why do colleges offer it? Higher Education Financial aid for students without financial need: Why do colleges offer it? Phillip Levine April 13, 2026 Subscribe Center for Economic Security and Opportunity Newsletter Monthly A … The post Financial aid for students without financial need appeared first on Brookings.
Your AI Leadership Coach for Higher Education Sophia is designed to meet you where you are and support you through the complexity of leading in higher education, where all of us have more responsibility than authority. She works best when you’re specific. The more honest you are with Sophia, the better she’ll be. Sophia does not store your responses. Nothing you share is logged, tracked, or traceable back to you. This is a completely confidential space. You can bring the real situation, not the polished version. To access Sophia, log into your Academic Impressions membership, and go to My Path. To give you a way to start, here are…
Dive Brief: The Texas Tech University System plans to close all academic programs focused on sexual orientation and gender identity, according to a Thursday memo from Chancellor Brandon Creighton to the system’s five institutional leaders. Creighton’s memo establishes a course policy that requires “recognition of only two human sexes and strictly prohibits the endorsement of a gender spectrum or fluid gender identities as empirical biological science.” The memo is in line with a 2025 executive order from President Donald Trump declaring that the federal government would only recognize two sexes, male and female. However, health experts have pushed back against…