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Learning Behind Bars: The Shifting Fortunes of Prison Education
While U.S. prison-reform advocates celebrate reversal of a 30-year ban on incarcerated students accessing Pell Grants, counterparts in England and Wales say government inaction has stalled progress.
Student Chatbot Use ‘Could Be Increasing Loneliness’
Study finds students who rely on ChatGPT for academic tasks feel socially supported by artificial intelligence at the expense of their real-life relationships.
Canada Signals Leeway on International Student-Visa Caps
With Trudeau government emphasizing visa limits tied to applications and housing availability, more established institutions gain some reassurance.
Charity Watchdog Tells Oxford Colleges to Modernize Governance
The move, following a four-year battle at one college to oust a dean and the mishandling of an alleged rape of a student at another college, is provoking internal controversy, a source claims.
U.K. Science Secretary Pays Damages to Professor Over Extremism Claims
The professor says the science secretary “made a cheap political point at my expense and caused serious damage to my reputation.”
It’s Time to Restore U.S. Study Abroad to China
The U.S. should restore Fulbright exchanges in China and encourage students to study there, Zhiqun Zhu writes.
Is ‘Fatphobia’ the Last Acceptable Prejudice in the Academy?
A Cornell University philosopher is calling out the discrimination—which is often blatant—faced by scholars deemed overweight.
2 Universities Sue Quebec Government Over Tuition Increases
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