President Trump ordered the data collection in early August.
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A week before colleges must report years of admissions data to the federal government, a group of Democratic state attorneys general sued the Trump administration to block what they say is an unlawful demand.
In recent weeks, colleges and the institutional research offices tasked to collect and report the data have been sounding the alarm about the looming deadline. An association recently requested a three-month extension. The Education Department responded with a conditional three-week extension.
The rule requiring the data collection was finalized in late December, and colleges first received word about the potential requirement in early August. Institutions typically have about a year to prepare for changes to Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System surveys, according to the lawsuit, which is led by Massachusetts attorney general Andrea Joy Campbell. Experts have said this new survey is the largest expansion in the history of IPEDS.
As part of the newly created Admissions and Consumer Transparency Supplement (ACTS) survey, colleges must submit years of disaggregated admissions data—including the test scores, grade point averages, race, sex and income ranges of applied, admitted and enrolled students dating as far back as 2019. The data collection is part of an effort to verify that universities aren’t considering race in admissions decisions after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the use of such practices in 2023.
The attorneys general argued in the lawsuit that with ACTS, the administration seeks “to fundamentally change IPEDS, converting it from a reliable tool for methodical statistical reporting to a mechanism for law enforcement and the furthering of partisan policy aims.”
They added that the scope, breadth and rushed process of the data collection places “a considerable burden” on institutions and could subject them to “costly investigations based on unreliable data.”
