
[ad_1] Something significant is happening in higher education. Whether it represents a genuine inflection point or another chapter in a longer story of technology and learning is…

[ad_1] The halfway point of the federal fiscal year looms at month’s end, yet the National Institutes of Health has only obligated around 15 percent of the estimated…

[ad_1] The original deadline was March 18. Photo illustration by Justin Morrison/Inside Higher Ed | Jupiterimages/Getty Images | asbe, korawat thatinchan and jat306/iStock/Getty Images Some colleges and universities…

[ad_1] Eight University of Alabama students have sued their institution’s Board of Trustees as well as Gov. Kay Ivey for shutting down their gender- and race-focused magazines,…

[ad_1] As three-year degrees become increasingly common, Connecticut has rejected these reduced-credit programs—at least for now. A broad bill that would have allowed the state’s institutions to…

[ad_1] Women and early-career investigators were disproportionately impacted by the thousands of National Institutes of Health grant terminations in 2025, according to a new analysis. Published in…

[ad_1] As students from the City University of New York—the nation’s largest urban public university system—enter an uncertain labor market, a new initiative aims to dramatically expand…

[ad_1] The National Advisory Committee on Institutional Quality and Integrity has one fewer member after the Department of Education removed Joshua Figueira mere months into the role.…

[ad_1] It’s that time of year when parents and students alike wait with bated breath for admissions decisions. After receiving a rejection, fury unleashes and rants unfurl—“But…

[ad_1] Former Harvard University president Claudine Gay will return to teaching in the fall, leading a course called What Is a University? Purpose and Politics in Higher…