Daily Democrat on MSN
Woodland Community College partners with TimelyCare prioritizing students’ mental health
Completing a degree in higher education is an incredible accomplishment that, in most cases, is not met without challenges – academically, socially and emotionally. While every student’s collegiate ...
In Spring 2024, CTL (formerly ASSETT) launched its inaugural Students as Partners program. This initiative partnered an equity-minded undergraduate student with a faculty member who sought to improve ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Dr. Legatt explores the intersection of education, AI, and leadership. The clearest signal yet that artificial intelligence has ...
More than 40% of higher education students are older than 22, and almost 70% are holding down jobs while taking courses, finds a new report on the "new majority" college student. Nontraditional ...
Key findings from Inside Higher Ed’s student survey on generative AI show that using the evolving technology hasn’t diminished the value of college in their view, but it could affect their critical ...
Santa Fe College has opened its doors for ICE. The Santa Fe College Board of Trustees approved a memorandum of agreement with the agency Tuesday afternoon. The 287(g) Task Force Model memorandum of ...
At M.I.T., a new program called “artificial intelligence and decision-making” is now the second-most-popular undergraduate major. By Natasha Singer Natasha Singer covers computer science and A.I.
Nearly half of college students have tried CBD products, according to new research from the University of Georgia.
As political battles upend college campuses, we asked dozens of students what is on their minds as they plan for the future. Politics was only part of it. By Alyce McFadden Colleges and universities ...
Tri-County Technical College and Clemson University have partnered to create a dual enrollment academy for high school sophomores. The program allows students to earn college credit at Tri-County and ...
College students are willing to pay more than an additional $2,000 in tuition to attend a college where fewer students hold political beliefs that oppose their own, according to a new working paper ...
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