Antidiscrimination and affirmative action efforts at colleges that receive federal aid are no longer required and could be prohibited, several lawyers said.
Indiana University said it found plagiarism allegations against Pamela Whitten to be without merit. Experts and scholars reached by The Chronicle were less sure.
Colleges face an era of heightened uncertainty, reform pressures, and potential economic headwinds under the incoming Trump administration. Some of the most discussed concerns per ...
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The new administration’s clear opposition to DEI could prompt colleges to preemptively revisit their diversity offices and ...
The departure of the University of Texas at Austin’s president has kindled a discussion about the pressures facing public ...
Our top liberal-arts colleges have few overseas competitors. Students around the world seek admission here, with particularly ...
Katherine Franke announced earlier this month that she had been forced out of her tenured position at Columbia University’s ...
He applauded Hungary’s leaders for “using muscular state policy to achieve conservative ends.” Rufo isn’t the only one in the ...
The decision comes after the Modern Language Association refused in November to let its members take a similar vote.
The 18-year-old was among the winners of NeurIPS’s first research competition for high schoolers. He was thrilled to be among ...
Congressional Republicans have reintroduced legislation that would amend Title IX to explicitly prohibit transgender girls ...