Families need clarity when it comes to figuring out how much higher education is going to cost them. Unfortunately, that's not what they're getting.
Schools are moving toward a model of continuous, lifelong learning in order to meet the needs of today’s economy.
The former Indiana governor, who leads Purdue University, believes that the hostility Americans are now showing one another is a threat to democracy.
The education secretary told senators that the group isn’t tasked with studying the role of firearms in campus violence.
… and what it says about gun violence in America today
A futurist says the industry may have nowhere to go but down. What does the slide look like?
Despite several White House events related to campus massacres this week, the president and his team did little to assure Americans that there are serious policy changes under way.
Subsidizing workers’ tuition is a good marketing move—and it should also help with the retail giant’s abysmal retention rate.
Amarillo College, in Texas, is working hard to accommodate low-income students—but it can only do so much.
Before the 9-year-old Linda Brown became the lead plaintiff in Brown v. Board of Education, a generation of black girls and teens led the charge against the “separate but equal” doctrine in public schools.
In Green v. New Kent County, the Court saw school desegregation as a reparative process—likely the closest thing to reparations that the American judicial system has ever endorsed.
Eleanor Holmes Norton used a commencement address at Georgetown to argue that securing positive, lasting change in America requires letting all sides have their say.
A conservative teacher’s surprise victory in the Kentucky legislature indicates that rural voters expect more from the party that presents itself as their champion.
When so many students have outstanding grades and test scores, schools have to get creative about triaging applicants.
Without respectful discourse, free speech isn’t much more than a hostile shouting match.
Strategies for recruiting and retaining low-income students aren’t particularly novel, though they can be tough to implement at scale.
What if the answer lies in changing how college admissions work?
The former education secretary thinks parents need to take radical action to change the country's gun laws.
Despite news reports that Republicans are generally skeptical of college, there are certain programs and institutions that they are quite warm to.
“It’s been happening everywhere. I've always kind of felt like eventually it was going to happen here, too.”
There’s no tax advantage, and it’s not easy, but some employers are offering loan-repayment as a benefit.
Some black parents see teaching their own children as a way of protecting them from the racial disparities of the American education system.