Don't Make Journalism School Free
Most aspiring journalists need an apprenticeship, not a degree.
Most aspiring journalists need an apprenticeship, not a degree.
The college is the latest in a spate of schools reinstating SAT and ACT test requirements.
The updated FAFSA form has been marred with technical problems, leaving many students unable to complete the financial aid form entirely.
Misled by a bad law, graduate students are drowning in debt.
Harvard should pick someone with academic integrity as its next president.
The plan is the Biden administration's latest effort to enact large-scale student loan forgiveness.
Persistent technical difficulties have made completing the financial aid form nearly impossible for many applicants.
After placing a pro-Palestinian front page over Northwestern's student newspaper, two students face "theft of advertising services" charges.
Misled by a bad law, graduate students are drowning in debt.
Several large public universities are getting multimillion dollar budget cuts.
Aaron Sibarium discusses the downfall of former Harvard President Claudine Gay on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
Plus: Which is worse, trashing Nancy Pelosi's office or having sex in a Senate hearing room?
There's increasing evidence that standardized tests accurately measure student achievement and are helpful, not hurtful, to disadvantaged applicants.
DEI statements are political litmus tests.
The media response to Claudine Gay's ouster has been ludicrous.
The next president should put more effort into fixing the college's abysmal free speech ranking.
My wife Alison Somin, an attorney with the Pacific Legal Foundation, outlines the problem.
The former two-term governor discusses why Florida is attracting more people than any other state in the country.
Some private universities receive more from the government than they net in tuition payments.
"Being a true free speech champion does require that you defend speech that even you disagree with," says libertarian Rikki Schlott.