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SOUTH HADLEY — Civil rights activist Judy Richardson moved with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in ways she said might have not been possible in other organizations during the C...
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Frustration is growing for thousands of DACA recipients who say their renewal applications are taking months to process.
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California Indian Nations College sees hope for tribal colleges becoming an official part of California public higher education.
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House Bill 698 looks to double down on Senate Bill 1, the sweeping higher education overhaul law passed in 2025.
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Delaware usually falls near the bottom of national rankings because, unlike most states, almost all high school juniors take the test.
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Malaya Lambert didn’t take a straight path into healthcare – or into advocacy. A mom, a former college athlete, and now a patient care technician, Malaya has navigated interrupted education, fin...
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Nevada's Board of Regents voted Friday to approve tuition increases which higher education leaders said were needed to fill an almost $50 million annual budget gap.
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Madison College's new child care center will give student-parents an option for care and college students a chance to get experience in the field.
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Talented Black professionals too frequently encounter resistance from white people at the epicenter of power who look for a reason—really, any reason—to not hire someone Black.
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At Carteret Community College, the Richmond Fed success rate helps measure the community college's effectiveness in a more holistic way.
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AMHERST — Even before Hampshire College closes at the end of the calendar year, the Five College Consortium and the three remaining private colleges and the University of Massachusetts need to make ...
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For students from low-income backgrounds, going to college can seem like an impossible dream. But the key to making that dream a reality often lies in completing a single form
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Senior higher education officials shared their strategies for tackling busy jobs at the American Association of Colleges and Universities′ annual conference.
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Locals, students, and college officials in the Twin Cities describe the mood as tense, apprehensive, and heavy.
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Award‑winning investigative journalist Nicole Carr — now a professor at Morehouse College — says she never intended to write a book. The former television news reporter also admits she “left the pages angry,” noting that it’s unsettling to draw such a clear through line between centuries‑old discrimination and the systemic racism that still shapes the medical field today.