cmaadmin (EDU)Hi this is my profile and bio information.HomeCAROL A. SUMNERCAROL A. SUMNER has been appointed vice president of the division of diversity, equity and inclusion at Texas Tech University. She currently serves as senior associate dean in the office of the dean of students at Arizona State University (ASU). Sumner received her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Illinois State University and doctorate in higher and postsecondary education from ASU.September 19, 2018HomeDAVE DAVISDAVE DAVIS was named executive director of neighborhood and community relations at Northwestern University. Prior to this new role, he worked as director of state and local relations at the institution. Davis received a bachelor’s degree in chemistry and environmental science from Alabama A&M University.September 19, 2018HBCUsCybersecurity Among Topics Discussed at HBCU ConferenceEfforts by historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) to increase engagement in industry, government and education partnerships was a key takeaway from Tuesday’s session at the 2018 National Historically Black Colleges and Universities Week Conference.September 18, 2018MilitaryStudy: Vets Get Less Tuition Covered for Medical DegreeStephen Graves was in his first year at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in 2014 when he discovered that the Post-9/11 GI Bill would cover more of his tuition were he enrolled in a law school or MBA program.September 18, 2018StudentsTRIO Programs: Paving the Way for Diverse Students in Higher EducationTRIO programs are essential educational opportunity programs that are vital in promoting educational success, retention, persistence and providing pathways to immense opportunities for low-income, first-generation college students and students with disabilities from diverse backgrounds.September 18, 2018HomeDistinguished Educators are Making a MarkDistinguished Educators Are Making a Mark.September 18, 2018News RoundupStudents in Educational Limbo After Sudden Harrison College ClosureCollege students in three states and five Indiana communities are scrambling to get their education on track and their money back, NBC affiliate station WTHR reported. Without warning, Indianapolis-based Harrison College closed campuses in Anderson, Columbus, Evansville, Fort Wayne and Terre Haute, as well as in Ohio and North Carolina. Answers are hard to come […]September 18, 2018HBCUsAlabama Senator Introduces Bill to Support MSIsU.S. Senator Doug Jones has introduced the Strengthening Minority-Serving Institutions Act which will increase mandatory funding levels from $255 million to $300 million for HBCUs and other minority-serving institutions of higher education. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) recently investigated the capital finance needs of HBCUs. Its report found that 46 percent of all HBCU buildings are […]September 18, 2018StudentsGeographical Bias in Testing: Is Cultural Bias a Problem of the Past or Are We Simply Not Looking in the Right Space?Despite the recent emergence of test optional and/or test flexible programs, wherein students do not need to, or can decide whether they want to submit their standardized test scores such as SAT/ACT for admission consideration, these standardized admission tests continue to play an important role in college choice, access, and admission decisions.September 17, 2018InternationalTemple to Offer Scholarships to International Students Amid Enrollment DecreasesTemple University is leading 57 other universities in an effort to welcome and keep international students by offering a scholarship that reduces tuition by at least 50 percent, according to a story published on Philly.com. The money will be awarded to 114 initial scholars at Temple beginning in 2019. The two annual, renewable scholarships are […]September 17, 2018Previous PagePage 304 of 3225Next Page