Google recently launched a second IT certificate, which circumvents four-year colleges and could save potential students thousands of dollars.
![](https://www.academia.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/52e5dc424354b114a6da8c7ccf203163143ad9ec5553754b7728_640_google-300x200.jpg)
Google recently launched a second IT certificate, which circumvents four-year colleges and could save potential students thousands of dollars.
California passed a bill that would expand student loan eligibility to Dreamers, or DACA recipients, but it was not clear how much it would cost the state.
A progressive online website published a video of George Washington University students who strongly disagreed with President Trump’s executive order on anti-Semitism. One of the students made a statement which apparently denied that the Holocaust happened.
Outrage ensued at San Diego State University when a suggested speakers’ list included a Nation of Islam leader, after which, the university removed the leader’s name from the list.
Hillsdale College and the University of Missouri agreed to disagree on a donor’s bequest and settled a lawsuit surrounding the hiring of free-market economic professors.
A student body president at the University of Florida faces impeachment proceedings because he invited Donald Trump, Jr. to speak to the university’s students about his recent book, “TRIGGERED.”
Right on cue: Protesters demand the firing of Syracuse University administrators after multiple race-related incidents took place on the university’s campus.
The new documentary, “No Safe Spaces,” is a must-see for those interested in the decline of the First Amendment in American society and on college campuses. We watched the documentary and came away impressed by how it exposed the social-justice-warrior mentality of the Left.
Activists hope that a court case could make it to the Supreme Court, one that could enshrine education as a constitutional right. However, legal precedents could derail those hopes.
Despite the advances and improvements in online learning, college professors still resist online learning and prefer in-person courses.