Starting Feb. 1, some domestic flyers without a REAL ID, passport, or other TSA-approved identification will have to pay a $45 fee before going through security.
Harvard still dominates, though it fell to No. 3 on a list measuring academic output. Other American universities are falling farther behind their global peers.
Foreign student enrollment at US universities fell this fall for the first time in three years after the Trump administration clamped down on immigration and took aim at a bevy of elite schools.
Restricting academic freedom is often thought of in terms of universities telling professors what they can and cannot do or teach. But that isn’t the only scenario.
U.S. college enrollment reached pre-pandemic levels this fall. But despite overall growth, some populations, such as adult learners and international graduate students, declined. Last year marked another 12 months of steady growth in U.S. higher education enrollment, according to the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center’s final report on fall enrollment, released today. Enrollment grew 1 percent from fall 2024, to 19.4 million students, and community colleges saw the largest increase, at 3 percent.