Today's Clips (5/27/20)
CORONAVIRUS

The unpredictability of life during the pandemic has been hard on everyone, but it has caused particular stress for many college students.

Chasing after a shrinking pool of wealthy students by increasing spending, and now vulnerable to closure because of the pandemic.

The SAT and ACT could be on their way out. Is that a good thing?

“Players don’t have a strong voice and have a union. Their voice is always suppressed,” said Camren McDonald, a tight end at Florida State.

With graduation ceremonies canceled during the Vietnam War, coronavirus now puts off this group’s 50th reunion; ‘You will never forget your senior year at Grinnell.’

Students discuss which elements of education were able to transfer from the classroom to the computer screen.

The 2020 gap year should focus on service and work.

They've had the worst economic luck in U.S. history. Many Millennials will never recover.

Experts talk about helping kids set routines, get plenty of exercise and shift their mind-set. But what happens when those things aren’t working?

Appalachian State's athletics department will cut three men's programs, making the Mountaineers the latest nationally to deal with financial issues.

IN OTHER NEWS

Low-income minorities have more to lose than gain from the woke war on standardized testing.

New research suggests that choosing the right program can matter more than the reputation of the school.

A former biotech chief executive on Tuesday became the latest parent to plead guilty in the U.S. college admissions scandal by admitting he paid a tennis coach $50,000 to secure his daughter's acceptance to Georgetown University.

TRADES

Rough times.

When students return to colleges, they are likely to find transformed spaces and new norms. Here’s what campus leaders say that could look like.

Archive available here: davidson-clips.ongoodbits.com
*|LIST:ADDRESS|*
Unsubscribe | View in browser