Today's Clips (1/20/26)
DAVIDSON IN THE NEWS
Fewer women are having children than a few generations ago. Sarah McCammon talks with three generations of women in one Atlanta family to understand how opportunities and choices have changed.
IN OTHER NEWS

Even as some instructors remain fervently opposed to chatbots, other writing and English professors are trying to improve them.

The Trump administration has pushed universities all over the country to act against student protesters.

Last fall, the number of new international undergraduates fell by 25 percent compared to the previous year. That drop poses financial and competitive challenges.

Technological change has both improved and impoverished the process of getting into college. The stakes feel different.

Finding a professional job right now is so tough that it is taking many of America’s most credentialed business-school graduates months to land offers.

While elite colleges and students reconsidered the value of the tests and the SAT gained consumers, the ACT made changes over the past two years to claw back market share.

Young graduates can’t find jobs. Schools know they have to make big changes, reports Jeffrey Selingo. But what?

The fast-moving South Carolina measles outbreak has spread to Clemson University.

TRADES

Academic life has barely changed in 40 years. Why? The faculty likes it that way.

Higher ed faced upheaval and uncertainty as the president sought to overhaul colleges and universities. Some leaders hope for a more stable year two, but significant changes loom. Before Donald Trump took office a year ago today, higher ed leaders expected that colleges and universities would face more scrutiny and pressure from the federal government. But few expected the pace and force of the changes the Trump administration quickly embarked on.

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