America is turning against higher education. Students are still signing up.
Politics, shrinking student pools, and AI mean a new era of uncertainty for higher education
Americans’ confidence in higher education has fallen precipitously. More commentators are wondering aloud whether a degree is worth the cost. High school graduates and their families fret about taking on student debt.
Top Stories
Supporting student health beyond the clinic: Social prescribing in higher ed
A student visits the campus counseling center for the third time this semester. She’s not in crisis. She’s lonely, overwhelmed, and unsure where she fits.
Colleges are adopting AI faster than they can govern it
Higher education is no longer standing at the edge of the artificial intelligence debate; it is already inside it, and the ground is shifting under its feet. Over the past six months, the most unsettling development has not been that students are using generative AI more often.
Creating educational value in a world of AI
Higher education is in the midst of its next major digital transformation: artificial intelligence. Conversations around technology make one thing clear: AI will shape the future of teaching and learning more than any technology in recent memory.
The lazy myth about online colleges and ‘too much advertising’
How a college chooses to structure its programs and spend its dollars is its job. The evidence of whether it’s working is in student outcomes.
Rising cyber threats drive higher-ed leaders to prioritize cyber resilience
Public sector and higher education organizations are responding to a rapidly evolving cyber threat landscape as artificial intelligence accelerates both innovation and cyber risk.
Higher ed faces mounting challenges amid evolving expectations
Colleges and universities are entering a period of rapid change driven by technological disruption, shifting enrollment patterns, and increasing pressure to demonstrate career relevance.
Uncovering the positive impact of practice study questions on how students learn and study
The Doer Effect is a long-standing principle that students who engage with more practice have higher learning gains than those who simply read text or watch a video.
Despite recent efforts to make change, top colleges are still home to mostly wealthy students
It’s hardly news that America’s elite universities are largely populated by students from America’s wealthiest families.
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The Visual Edge: How High-Impact Technology Redefines Campus Differentiation and Enrollment Strategy
In the current higher education landscape, waning enrollment is still a present challenge. While overall enrollment numbers are showing signs of a rebound, National Student Clearinghouse Research Center data indicates that undergraduate enrollment has yet to fully return to pre-pandemic levels.
