Today's Clips (2/19/20)
DAVIDSON IN THE NEWS

Make decisions that open up the most future pathways

IN OTHER NEWS

A group representing Asian-American students is appealing a judge’s ruling that Harvard did not explicitly discriminate against them by boosting other racial and ethnic groups.

The push for personal pronouns like “they/them” and “ze/hir” can ignite a power struggle in college classrooms. The Kennedy School of Government’s solution? Stickers.

Mike Bloomberg’s newly released plan takes a different approach. It addresses both quality and cost, in detail. Whatever else you think of his campaign, his approach to higher education is arguably the most progressive of any candidate.

From the Young Republicans to the 'Groypers,' college conservatives keep edging farther and more provocatively to the right.

The conservative activist soared to fame as “gun girl” after posing for graduation pictures with an AR-10 rifle.

The University of Arkansas and a former student reached a settlement agreement in a lawsuit alleging school officials acted with “deliberate indifference” after she reported being sexually assaulted by another student on campus.

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology has agreed to provide captions for more of its publicly available online videos as part of a settlement announced Tuesday in a case that accused the school of discriminating against people who are deaf or hard of hearing.

At present, Reagan National University apparently has no students or faculty. Yet it was accredited – by a group saved by the Education Department.

The trustee was censured by the UNC System earlier this month for trying to influence a student election on the Greenville campus.

Silent Sam stood in McCorkle Place on UNC-CH’s campus for more than 100 years before protesters pulled it down in August 2018.

Former Temple University fraternity president Ari Goldstein was convicted Tuesday for his role in an attempted sexual assault of another student -- one of two incidents presented to the jury.

TRADES

Student protesters occupying a building at Syracuse University have dug in their heels and refused to leave. University leaders responded by suspending them.

Initiative aimed at increasing Pell-eligible student enrollment at high-performing colleges is doing well. But a sudden plateau in progress shows hard choices colleges may need to make to move forward.

Momentum grows to rewrite the rules of graduate training.

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