Black Colleges Swept Up in For-Profit Crackdown Find Relief From DeVos
The United Negro College Fund has been among the most vocal critics of Obama-era student borrower protections, saying they threaten the viability of its 37 member institutions.

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The United Negro College Fund has been among the most vocal critics of Obama-era student borrower protections, saying they threaten the viability of its 37 member institutions.
By ERICA L. GREEN
A state “target” meant to limit the number of students receiving special education services violated federal law, regulators said in a letter ordering the state to make amends.
By BRIAN M. ROSENTHAL
Trustees must rein in frivolous spending at public universities.
By JAMES V. KOCH
Naomi Wolf sought to file a complaint with the university against the famed literary critic Harold Bloom, who she says groped her while she was a student in 1983.
By KATE TAYLOR
A handful of prestigious law schools, for the first time this admissions cycle, are allowing applicants to submit GRE scores instead of LSAT scores. This issue's Pop Quiz: sample questions from both.
By JANE KARR
Graduate programs in STEM have the highest percentage of international students of any broad academic field. Why don’t the locals bother?
By NICK WINGFIELD
Christina Hoff Sommers, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, long argued that the Obama model didn’t work. Here’s her take on what the changes mean.
Interview by STEPHANIE SAUL
A retiring editor reflects on three decades of education coverage and the issues that endure.
By JANE KARR
With so many variations on what constitutes higher education as well as family, it’s no wonder there are so many definitions. And that matters.
By ROCHELLE SHARPE