Texas senators move to ban tenure and diversity initiatives State Senate has already passed one of three bills that would end tenure, force universities to fire professors who attempt to compel certain beliefs, and ban what the legislation defines as diversity, equity and inclusion programming By Ryan Quinn for Inside Higher Ed 17 April
Harvards Bacow urges pushback against political threats Outgoing president laments partisan attacks on academia as he is criticised for handing a major honour to top funder of Ron DeSantis By Paul Basken 17 April
Big university donors are distorting research agendas Kenneth Griffins $300 million donation to Harvard is unusual in not being tied to pet ideological causes, says Naomi Oreskes By Naomi Oreskes 17 April
March Madness college basketball success boosts applications Analysis shows institutional recruitment increases after branding and visibility boosts in annual tournament By Patrick Jack 13 April
Vinod Menon: My most memorable moment? Receiving $180,000 The India-born, CUNY-based expert on light-matter interaction discusses his work to help school students share his sense of excitement By Paul Basken 13 April
US halts plan to block foreign companies In ongoing retreat from February order that alarmed higher education, Biden officials cancel third-party restrictions By Paul Basken 13 April
Rutgers faculty begin strike Unions representing full-time and adjunct faculty walk out at New Jerseys three-campus 67,000-student system By Paul Basken 12 April
Legacy admissions for alumni children: the beginning of the end? University of Pennsylvanias pulling of legacy aid seen as sign of embarrassment and potential harbinger of change across US elite By Paul Basken 11 April
US states are turning their backs on bachelors degrees. Work is needed To retain students, US institutions must give credit for learning that occurs in professional settings, say Stephen Handel and Eileen Strempel By Stephen J. Handel 7 April
Our cybercrime story had a happy ending, but yours may not. Be vigilant The theft of more than $800,000 by hackers prompted uncomfortable conversations about preparedness or lack of it, says John Cox By John Cox 6 April
US west collaboration aims to boost rural learners, blunt political hostility Montana-based founder of Networked University idea eyes new way to aid students, share resources and, perhaps, bridge societal divides By Paul Basken 5 April
Hamline president to leave amid Islam dispute Fayneese Miller, universitys first black president, to retire after months of battling over propriety of Muhammad painting in art class By Paul Basken 4 April