Stories Tagged as
College
Millennials with "boom-mates" could ease the housing crunch
Aug 8, 2017
Renting a room from an empty nester can save a young person thousands a year. The older generation gets something, too.
You don't need to be a college grad to work in tech
by
Kai Ryssdal
, Bridget Bodnar
and Emily Henderson
Aug 1, 2017
IBM has a special program to hire people without four-year degrees.
Community college tries fixing roadblocks to completion
by
Amy Scott
Jun 15, 2017
California school makes its remedial classes shorter and more relevant.
Northwestern's Medill journalism school argues accreditation is of 'little value'
by
Miles Bryan
Jun 13, 2017
Will its unaccredited status hurt graduates of the program?
In Erie, Pennsylvania, a refugee family dreams of college and worries how to pay for it
by
Amy Scott
May 30, 2017
'It's like heaven inside,' junior Megha Ghimirey says of her American high school.
The Common Application gets an update
by
Amy Scott
May 29, 2017
The application used by thousands of high school students to apply to colleges is going to get a new version, one that tailors to a large but under-recognized portion of the student population. The Common Application will roll out an updated transfer version next year that tailors to students such as parents with children who […]
3 things you may have missed about Trump's budget
by
Janet Nguyen
May 25, 2017
A look at how the education system could be impacted and how Trump's voter base might react.
For public good, not for profit.
College business programs look to the liberal arts model
by
Amy Scott
May 2, 2017
The most popular undergraduate major gets a makeover.
Study suggests attending college full time is better
by
Amy Scott
Apr 20, 2017
Only about 40 percent of community college students earn a degree within six years. But students who go to class full time are much more likely to graduate. A new study finds that even one semester of full-time attendance makes a difference. Click the audio player above to hear the full story.
New York to offer free tuition at public colleges
by
Amy Scott
Apr 10, 2017
New York has become the first state to approve a “free college” plan for middle-class families. A $153 billion budget deal reached Sunday night includes a new Excelsior Scholarship. It will cover tuition at the state’s public colleges and universities for families earning up to $125,000 a year. But as any family paying for college […]