|
|
Browse by Tags
All Tags » paying for college
Showing page 1 of 10 (93 total posts)
-
Students who receive above-average scores on standardized college
admissions tests, such as the SAT, may benefit the most from
commercial test preparation services, according to new report from
the National Association for College Admission Counseling, although
the benefits of such test preparation may not outweigh the costs for ...
-
Last summer Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland offered American military
veterans worldwide a no-cost education at any of Ohio’s public
colleges. The state has just now finished tallying its number of
veteran students in preparation for the program’s Aug. 1, 2009 start
date, the same day the new GI Bill goes into effect, reports ...
-
Arizona State University officials have decided to rename the
school’s largest financial aid program after President Barack Obama
in honor of his commencement address to ASU’s 2009 graduating class,
reports The Arizona Republic (“1,600 ASU Freshmen Will Qualify for
Obama Scholarship,” May 7, 2009).
Approximately 1,600 incoming ...
-
The Texas Senate has voted to limit future tuition hikes, including
a 5–percent yearly cap for the largest universities in the state,
after seeing the state’s 35 public universities increase tuition and
fees 86 percent since 2003, reports The Dallas Morning News (“Bill
Limiting College Tuition and Fee Hikes Clears Texas Senate,” ...
-
Almost 260 colleges and universities around the country still have
openings for students, and most of these schools still have ample
financial aid available, according to survey results from the
National Association for College Admission Counseling (“NACAC
Survey: Space and Financial Aid Still Available for Students On ...
-
University of Michigan President Mary Sue Coleman has stepped
forward to set the record straight with TIME magazine after an
article in the publication began circulating rumors about the
university being forced to privatize due to state budget
constraints, The Detroit News reports (“U-M President Refutes Report
That ...
-
Although the swine flu virus (H1N1) hasn’t hit most U.S. college
campuses, college health officials are starting to take precautions,
including cancelling study abroad programs in Mexico, The Chronicle
of Higher Education reports (“Swine Flu Prompts More Colleges to
Cancel Study-Abroad Programs in Mexico,” April 28, ...
-
After discovering an online loophole that allowed him to access
student records, Texas Women’s University student Josh Ingram
thought he could use the loophole to change the recorded grades of
any student he wanted, the Denton Record-Chronicle reports (“TWU
Shuts Down, Secures Computer System After Student Finds Way to
Access ...
-
Alta Colleges, operating 17 campuses in six states, recently settled
a lawsuit involving student-aid fraud allegations and has agreed to
pay the federal government $7 million, The Chronicle of Higher
Education reports (“Proprietary College to Pay $7-Million to Settle
Federal Student-Aid Charges,” April 20, 2009).
Unnamed ...
-
Vice President Joe Biden intends to make higher education a reality
for more young people, the Associated Press reports, in part by
closing the gap between families’ incomes and rising college costs
(“Biden Wants to Make Higher Ed More Affordable,” USA Today, April
18, 2009).
At a town hall–style meeting he hosted in St. Louis ...
1 ...
|
|
|