Harvard Law makes ‘Zero-L’ program for incoming students available to all law schools this summer

May 27, 2020

HARVARD LAW TODAY – Several years ago, Harvard Law School (HLS) administrators observed that the profile of incoming law school students was very different than it was even a decade ago. Students coming to HLS now reflected many different backgrounds and lived experiences, with many more having majored in a STEM field in college, spent four

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Universities likely to reopen on a case-by-case basis

May 26, 2020

THE NEW YORK TIMES – Across the country this fall, college life is likely to be vastly different from campus to campus — a patchwork that mirrors what is currently happening in states and communities, as some move toward widespread reopening and others keep their economies mostly closed. Shut down in a stricken wave this

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Colleges announce budget and staff cuts

May 26, 2020

THE CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION – As the coronavirus outbreak erodes financial health and administrative confidence at colleges across the country, some have started to lay off or furlough employees en masse to thwart colossal budget shortfalls. Amid this unprecedented challenge to the industry’s business model, The Chronicle is tracking those employment actions and others to

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Colleges announce plans for the fall

May 26, 2020

THE CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION – The coronavirus pandemic has left higher-education leaders facing difficult decisions about when to reopen campuses and how to go about it. The Chronicle is tracking individual colleges’ plans. The vast majority say they are planning for an in-person fall semester. We’re currently tracking nearly 780 colleges.

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Universities begin to announce faculty and budget cuts

May 26, 2020

THE CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION – This week, letters were sent to an unknown number of instructors, telling them that they won’t be reappointed for the fall, with the caveat that things could change over the summer. “I am very sorry for the consternation I know this will cause you,” Emily A. McDermott, the interim provost,

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CDC releases guidelines for colleges on reducing the spread of coronavirus amid reopening

May 26, 2020

INSIDE HIGHER ED – The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued new guidance on Tuesday for colleges as they reopen their campuses. Colleges will be looking to the CDC as many prepare to welcome back students, 19.9 million of whom were enrolled at U.S. colleges last fall. While the guidance does not address when or whether colleges should

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Senator Lamar Alexander states COVID-19 testing will be sufficient for fall college reopening

May 26, 2020

INSIDE HIGHER ED – Colleges and universities around the country will have sufficient testing capacity and are taking the needed steps to safely reopen their physical campuses this fall, the head of the U.S. Senate’s education committee said in a discussion with reporters Thursday. He also vowed that Senate Republicans would ensure that colleges receive liability

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University of Kentucky fall reopening could come with fever checkpoints and quarantine dorms

May 26, 2020

THE NEW YORK TIMES – Fever checkpoints at the entrances to academic buildings. One-way paths across the grassy quad. Face masks required in classrooms and dining halls. And a dormitory turned quarantine facility for any students exposed to the coronavirus. That was one vision for the fall semester at the University of Kentucky conjured up

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Cambridge University will hold student lectures online this fall

May 26, 2020

THE NEW YORK TIMES – Cambridge on Tuesday became the first British university to move all student lectures online for the coming academic year, underscoring the far-reaching changes the coronavirus is forcing on higher education institutions around the world. The 800-year-old university said in a statement that it was “likely that social distancing will continue to

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Opinion: reopening campuses comes with risks

May 26, 2020

THE CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION – Reopening too soon is not just foolish; it’s reckless.

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