U. of Alaska has 2 days to save itself; accused sex-trafficker has given millions to Harvard; student debt adds to social-mobility crisis; and more.
Was this newsletter forwarded to you? Please sign up to receive your own copy. You’ll support our journalism and ensure that you continue to receive our emails.
Alaska’s governor wants to slash higher-education funding by $130 million to increase residents’ cash payout. How will the cuts affect students and the state’s economic viability? (PREMIUM)
Campus leaders are promoting the system’s economic impact and student access as lawmakers prepare to vote Wednesday on a 41-percent cut in state funding. (PREMIUM)
In explaining historic cuts, Gov. Mike Dunleavy said Alaska’s universities can’t be “all things for all people.” He’s only the latest to use that message. (PREMIUM)
The university declined to comment on whether it plans to return any of the donations given by Jeffrey Epstein, who was charged on Saturday with sex trafficking.
Higher ed is a weaker engine of mobility than it once was, and the solution lies more with board members than with debt cancellation or other populist slogans, writes a former university president in a new book. (PREMIUM)
Subscribe Today
Without premium access, you are missing critical reporting and analysis on the news, policies, and controversies that are shaping the academic landscape.
Making smart windows available in Australia and beyond will lower costs while conserving energy and reducing the impact controlling temperatures has on the environment.
Colleges have tried for many years to send more students to study abroad. But the numbers remain stagnant, and new challenges, such as growing wealth disparities among students and nativist political rhetoric, have made such efforts even harder. Purchase this collection to learn strategies for overcoming those obstacles and make sure more students get an international experience.