Hello! No shortage of education headlines even in the height of summer for our weekly roundup.
DeVos meets with "men's rights" groups on campus sexual assault
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has indicated that
she will loosen
As Slate
reported
Candice Jackson, whom DeVos appointed as the top enforcer of sexual assault cases at the Department of Education, seemed to agree with that position in remarks to
The New York Times
In a rare press availability after Thursday's meeting,
DeVos told reporters
"No student should be the victim of sexual assault," she added. "No student should feel unsafe ... and no students should feel like the scales are tipped against him or her."
Students, colleges spar at reopening of regulatory hearings
Last month, DeVos walked back two Obama-era regulations aimed at protecting student borrowers. Beginning with two public hearings this week, in Washington, D.C., and in Dallas, the Education Department has reopened the "negotiated regulation" process, or "neg reg" as insiders call it. As we reported:
- The "gainful employment" rule sanctions individual programs at colleges and universities based on how many students are able to pay back their loans.
- The "borrower defense to repayment" rule smooths the way for students to get their loans forgiven if their college is found to engage in fraudulent behavior, a situation that has befallen tens of thousands of students at Corinthian Colleges and ITT Technical Institute, among others, in the last few years.
Consumer advocates and students
spoke in favor
Mizzou freshman enrollment falls, especially among African-Americans
In fall 2015, at the height of the Black Lives Matter movement, Missouri's flagship institution, known as Mizzou, became a flashpoint. It's located in Columbia, two hours from Ferguson, where teenager Michael Brown was killed by police in 2014. Mizzou students camped out on the quad, protesting perceived bigotry and indifference on the part of the administration. Both the university's president and the chancellor of the system were ultimately forced out.
Two years later, The New York Times
reported this week
The drop in freshman enrollment among black students in last year's class was down 42 percent, twice that of white students.
Nathan Willett, the president of the student government, responded to the Times story in an op-ed in the
The Kansas City Star
New college rankings from Money magazine: Princeton, CUNY top list
Money magazine has released a new set of
college rankings
The top of Money's list doesn't look too different from rankings produced by other methodologies: Princeton is No. 1. However, the City University of New York's Baruch College, lauded for its success at producing upward mobility among working-class students, is at the No. 2 spot.
Hard evidence for soft skills
Social and emotional learning (SEL) programs exhibit long-term benefits,
according to a large new meta-analysis of previous research.
These programs focus on teaching students to acknowledge and better manage their own emotions and empathize with the emotions of others.
After 3 1/2 years, students exposed to SEL academically outperformed their peers by an average of 13 percentage points, and they did better on many other measures as well.
"At other follow-up periods, conduct problems, emotional distress and drug use were all significantly lower for SEL students," the study found. "Benefits were similar regardless of students' race, socioeconomic background or school location."
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