Some online colleges allow students to take unlimited courses on their own time, leading to quick degrees and worries about devaluing credentials.
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Covering education, entrepreneurship, AI, innovation, and nomad travel For decades, the path was straightforward: graduate from ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Specialist in global markets, economics and alternative investments. It’s not a great time to be a new college graduate looking to ...
More high school graduates are considering community college over a four-year school, recent studies show. For the first time, students aged 18 to 20 represented the largest share of first-time ...
At long last, the job market might be giving the Class of 2026 an early graduation present. After years of steady deterioration, there are early signs entry-level hiring is picking up. A widely ...
College football is moving toward an earlier start to the season. On Thursday, the Division I FBS Oversight Committee recommended moving up Week 1 to the week typically reserved for Week 0, starting ...
For years, families have agonized over the rising cost of a degree, yet many have felt they had no choice but to take out whatever loans were necessary to send their children to college. That ...
A recent poll shows AI’s increasing role in how students decide on college majors, creating a rapidly developing situation for universities that are still struggling to determine how the technology ...
Proof-of-concept exploit code has been published for a critical remote code execution flaw in protobuf.js, a widely used JavaScript implementation of Google's Protocol Buffers. The tool is highly ...
When I attended Hampshire College in the early 2000s, a running joke among students was that the school was about to go bust: that it had run out of funding, lost its accreditation, or been sold to ...
Approaching the end of spring practice across college football, now is the time coaching staffs hammer down their projected two-deeps and start glancing at the early-season schedule ahead of the 2026 ...
The “demographic cliff” is upon us. The number of teenagers graduating from American high schools peaked last year. It will begin declining this spring and keep falling steadily through at least 2041.