Economic stimulus

Economic stimulus

May 28, 2021
Without federal stimulus money, states would have cut tax appropriations for higher education by 2.3 percent. But how states are spending the billions in stimulus varies.

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May 28, 2021
Without federal stimulus money, states would have cut tax appropriations for higher education by 2.3 percent. But how states are spending the billions in stimulus varies.
January 19, 2021
HBCUs will now be able to invest in infrastructure improvements, new construction and student recruitment efforts, their leaders say.
October 12, 2020
The challenges before college students today match those of any generation, write Morton Schapiro and Barry Glassner, and they will need all the support older Americans can offer.
June 20, 2017
If the administration’s expanded apprenticeship program is to succeed, it must ensure a baseline of quality and rigor, alignment with industry standards, and equity in access and participation, writes Cassius O. Johnson.
April 7, 2016
Low-income and nondependent students have been protected from state disinvestment in higher education during the last two decades because of increasing federal aid spending, a new study finds.
June 18, 2013
With the president's second term now well under way, many key vacancies remain in the Obama administration's higher ed policy making team.
May 9, 2011
A new report about how states divvied up stimulus money for education suggests looming problems for higher ed.
November 17, 2010
INDIANAPOLIS -- One's perception of how widely colleges and universities have embraced the necessity and inevitability of fundamental transformative change -- in how the institutions educate students, how they finance themselves, etc. -- is likely to depend on which sorts of higher education conferences he or she attends.
October 7, 2010
As budget anxieties persist, some universities address years of stagnant wages with one-time salary boosts instead of permanent raises.
April 15, 2010
As state legislators around the country craft their budgets for the 2011 fiscal year, public college officials are afraid that they are about to be thrown off "the cliff" -- the steep drop in available funds once the tens of billions of dollars that the federal government made available through last year's economic recovery legislation run out.

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