Institutional researchers are scrambling to hand over an unprecedented amount of information — and fretting about how the feds will use the data.
A federal judge on Friday temporarily blocked the Trump administration from requiring colleges and universities to collect ...
Seventeen states sued to block a Trump administration mandate requiring colleges to report detailed admissions data on race, gender and test scores.
"Once again, this administration is trying to stretch the federal government’s authority to serve its own political agenda," ...
A week before colleges must report years of admissions data to the federal government, a group of Democratic state attorneys ...
U.S. District Judge F. Dennis Saylor on Friday granted a temporary restraining order through March 25 blocking the department ...
BLOG OVERVIEW: The Department of Education's new Admissions and Consumer Transparency Supplement (ACTS) requires four-year colleges and universities to report seven years of detailed student-level ...
As tuition rises, financial aid has expanded, but without significantly altering who benefits. The Chronicle took a closer look at federal and institutional data to see how that trend has played out.
California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, Nevada, New Jersey, Oregon, ...
President Donald Trump wants to collect more admissions data from colleges and universities to make sure they’re complying with a 2023 Supreme Court decision that ended race-conscious affirmative ...