News

To cover the Supreme Court these days is to catalogue its lawlessness. The conservative justices’ latest decision in McMahon ...
We deserve to know why the U.S. Supreme Court is allowing President Trump, without explanation from the court, to pursue his ...
Investigation demands financial records from U of M, along with information about research collaborations with institutions outside the U.S.
When student Hanaan Kazia first heard about the federal civil rights probe into George Mason University, she wasn’t surprised ...
The problem is that many Rhode Island residents cannot safely access those water bodies. Between 2020 and 2024, 80 people died from accidental drowning in Rhode Island, an average of 16 per year, ...
In a series of terse, unsigned orders, the court has often been giving the green light to President Trump’s agenda without a ...
Nonprofits that support students may not be able to survive the withholding of federal funding, a Philly education advocate ...
The Supreme Court on Monday ruled to allow the Trump administration to resume its efforts to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education. What will that mean to schools, students and families?
Overall, the change will see borrowers being charged more than $27 billion in interest over the next 12 months.
North Carolina joined 23 other states in suing the U.S. Department of Education for withholding billions of dollars.
The audit, which was released this week and covered the fiscal years ending June 30, 2021, 2022 and 2023, listed 15 findings. Twelve of the findings were repeat issues noted in prior audits, the ...
A Herald-Leader analysis of public documents revealed at least 157 Kentucky students or teachers cheated on state-mandated tests from 2022 to 2024.