Immigration officials are rapidly revoking hundreds of student visas. Many more are going unreported at small colleges anxious to avoid federal scrutiny.
New College of Florida may soon take over stewardship of a local art museum and another branch campus. Critics argue NCF doesn*t have the means or capability to manage either.
By Josh Moody
7 April
From lawsuits to protests, labor organizations representing faculty, grad students and other workers are resisting. Discussions about what to do next continue.
Trump*s attacks are not the only problem: falling enrolment and birth rates are forcing colleges to be more things to more people, says Kathleen deLaski
Exactly how many staff members and grants will be slashed from the National Endowment for the Humanities remains unclear, but prior cuts at the Education Department and National Institutes of Health offer a grim forecast.
By Jessica Blake
3 April
The National Institutes of Health terminated numerous federal research grants that officials say no longer align with the agency*s priorities. But experts see multiple avenues to appeal the NIH*s decisions.
By Kathryn Palmer
2 April
Three universities in Ohio announced job and program cuts in March. They were joined by public and private institutions coast to coast in making workforce reductions.
Outgoing president of the University of Toronto discusses Canada*s international student restrictions, impact of second Trump term and prospect of more &bad surprises* awaiting his successor
The president*s antisemitism task force will carry out a ※comprehensive§ investigation that follows the same playbook it used for a review at Columbia University.
By Jessica Blake
31 March
Many of the agency*s offices and programs are codified in federal law, raising questions about how much McMahon can reduce the department without Congress.
The program has always followed US foreign policy. Leaving people in the lurch is an incomprehensible new frontier, say Marisa Lally and Gerardo Blanco