|
|
Browse by Tags
All Tags » The New York Times
Showing page 1 of 2 (18 total posts)
-
College graduates who were lured into high-need fields, including teaching, nursing, and public service, by programs that would forgive a
portion or all of their student loans are receiving this sobering news: The cavalry isn’t coming after all.
These graduates, who in some cases were enticed by the loan forgiveness programs to take out ...
-
Although the government has taken steps to bolster the federal student loan program by expanding Pell Grant awards and raising the maximum award amount of federal Stafford student loans, federal financial aid will still not be enough for many families to pay for college this year.
Grappling with stock market losses that have negatively affected ...
-
It’s “all hands on deck” for federal student loan lenders. The banks
and third-party student loan providers that make up the Federal Family Education Loan Program have made it abundantly clear that they’re not
going to roll over and accept the terms of the Obama administration’s proposal to axe their loan program in favor of the Education ...
-
Michael Crow, the president of Arizona State University who seven
years ago promised to make ASU “The New American University” and to
grow the school’s enrollment to 100,000 students by 2020, could see
his plans go unfulfilled because of state budget cuts, reports The
New York Times (“State Colleges Also Face Cuts in Ambitions,” ...
-
Judah Lakin, a Rhode Island high school teacher, spends much of his time trying to help his students prepare for college. But even if his students have what it takes to pursue a higher education, many of them are undocumented immigrants and will never step foot on a college campus because they don’t have access to federal financial aid or ...
-
The City University of New York school system hopes to open a
“college of the future” that would limit enrollment to under 5,000 students, offer degrees or certificates only in fields with promising job
growth, and serve as a model for community colleges nationwide, The New York Times reports (“CUNY Plans New Approach to Community College,” ...
-
To help ensure that low-income students can afford a college education
in the midst of a recession, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is committing nearly $70 million
in grants toward its goal of doubling the number of low-income students who earn a college degree or vocational credential by age 26,
The New York Times reports ...
-
New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo is investigating the relationships between colleges and the health insurance companies they do business with just two years after he launched a similar investigation that uncovered conflicts of interest between some colleges and student loan companies, The New York Times reports (“Cuomo Investigating ...
-
Alexandria, Virginia-based Goal Financial is the most recent student loan company to reach a settlement with the New York Attorney General’s office, whose investigation into the student loan industry revealed that several lenders used deceptive marketing practices to lure borrowers, The New York Times reports (“Another Student Loan Company ...
-
The colleges and universities that use students’ SAT and ACT standardized test scores when making college admissions and financial aid decisions should base these decisions on tests that more closely reflect a student’s high school achievement and understanding of the high
school curriculum, according to the recommendations made by a new ...
1
|
|
|