Welcome to The EDU Ledger.com! We’ve moved from Diverse.
Welcome to The EDU Ledger! We’ve moved from Diverse: Issues In Higher Education.
Subscribe
Students
Faculty & Staff
Leadership & Policy
Podcasts
Top 100
Advertise
Jobs
Shop
Search
Article
Podcast
Video
Awards/Honors
Community Colleges
Demographics
Faculty & Staff
Health
Institutions
Leadership & Policy
Military
On the Move
Opinion
Sports
Students
Enter search phrase
Search
Veterans
Benefit for Disabled Vets Begins in November
By Kellie Lunney | The Office of Personnel Management on Friday will publish the final rule implementing a law that gives new federal employees who are disabled veterans the equivalent of a full year’s sick leave up front to go to their medical appointments. The 2015 Wounded Warriors Federal Leave Act gives 104 hours of […]
August 11, 2016
Other News
Protect Higher Education for Our Veterans
Following more than a decade of fighting asymmetric conflicts on multiple fronts, many veterans today face an entirely new dilemma on a very different terrain. While transitioning from military to civilian life, millions of veterans consider taking advantage of their GI Bill benefits to further their education. The Post-9/11 GI Bill — enacted in 2008 […]
August 11, 2016
Veterans
Injured Marine Finds Healing in Woodworking
Retired Gunnery Sgt. Ernesto Aquino was wounded 12 years ago during his fifth deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan and came home with back injuries that left him wheelchair bound with post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury. He was close to taking his life, but the thought of his children without a father held him […]
August 11, 2016
Academics
Increasing Adjunct Faculty
By Ashley A. Smith | Student success initiatives tend to work better on campuses where faculty members are engaged. So Achieving the Dream, the nonprofit organization that advocates for institutional improvement at community colleges, is unveiling a new initiative that will help part-time faculty members become more active in their colleges’ reform efforts, with the […]
August 11, 2016
Blogs/Opinion
Not a fish tale: Eating fatty fish is good for your health, doc says
There’s no question that we Americans don’t have enough fish in our diets. As little fish as we eat, we consume even less fatty fish, which is a bigger tragedy. Fatty fish — herring, sardines, salmon, tuna, trout and others — are our only source of fish oil (outside of supplementation). Doctors are particularly concerned […]
August 11, 2016
Home
Clinton v. Trump Workforce Policy
The upcoming election promises to fuel both federal and local interest in workforce regulation, as the leading candidates from both parties have focused their campaigns addressing inequality through a variety of measures, including changes to the laws governing the workforce.
August 11, 2016
Students
Former Swimmer, University Reach Settlement in Hazing Case
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. — A former Western Kentucky University swimmer has reached a settlement in a lawsuit in which he claimed to have been hazed and assaulted by his teammates. Attorney Vanessa Cantley was quoted by the Daily News as saying that her client Collin Craig had reached a confidential resolution with all parties named […]
August 10, 2016
Students
California Lawmaker Drops Lawsuits in Religious School Bill
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A California lawmaker announced Wednesday he is removing a contentious provision of his bill that would have allowed LGBT students to more easily sue religious schools for discrimination, conceding defeat to religious colleges that had launched a campaign against it. The measure would have eliminated a longstanding exemption from state anti-discrimination laws […]
August 10, 2016
Home
JOANNE A. EPPS
JOANNE A. EPPS has been named provost of Temple University. She is dean of the Beasley School of Law at Temple. Epps earned a bachelor’s from Trinity College in Connecticut and a juris doctor from Yale University.
August 10, 2016
Students
California Federation of Teachers Calls for ED to Delist ACCJC as Accreditor
A coalition of two California unions and the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) filed a new complaint against the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges (ACCJC).
August 10, 2016
Students
Gap Year Students: Another Form of Diversity
The recent announcement that First Daughter Malia Obama would be taking a “Gap Year” before starting Harvard University in 2017 has shed new light (and increased popularity) on a path typically taken by students in Europe and Australia.
August 10, 2016
Home
DIANA RODRIGUEZ
DIANA RODRIGUEZ has been appointed president of San Bernardino Valley College. She is vice president of student services at Las Positas College in California. Rodriguez holds an associate from Palo Verde College, and a bachelor’s, an MBA and a master’s from California State University, San Bernardino.
August 10, 2016
Home
BRIAN O. HEMPHILL
BRIAN O. HEMPHILL has been appointed president of Radford University. He was president of West Virginia State University. Hemphill earned a bachelor’s from Saint Augustine’s University, a master’s from Iowa State University of Science and Technology and a doctorate from the University of Iowa.
August 10, 2016
Home
JOY CONNOLLY
JOY CONNOLLY has been named provost and senior vice president of the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. She is a professor of classics and dean for humanities at New York University. Connolly earned a bachelor’s from Princeton University and a doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania.
August 10, 2016
Home
GENA BARDWELL
GENA BARDWELL has been appointed interim director of general education at the New York School of Career and Applied Studies (NYSCAS), a division of the Touro College & University System. She was an assistant professor at NYSCAS. Bardwell earned a bachelor’s from Stephens College and a master’s from Rutgers University.
August 10, 2016
Students
Dibinga Uses Spoken Word to Advocate for Social Justice
Dr. Omékongo Dibinga, a Congolese American and a professor of cross cultural communication at American University, teaches students the hard truths about power, race and culture.
August 10, 2016
Other News
Latinos Face Digital Divide In Health Care
When considering Latinos, educators often struggle with how to close the achievement gap. That gap is often defined as a disparity in academic success between native English speakers and those for whom Spanish was their first language. Health communicators have gaps of their own to address: digital divides. These exist both between English- and Spanish-speaking […]
August 10, 2016
Other News
Skin cancer is deadlier for black patients
Black people are more likely to die from the most deadly type of skin cancer, scientists claim. Although white people have a higher chance of developing skin cancer, patients with skin of colour are less likely to survive. Patients of African-American descent were more likely to be diagnosed with melanoma once it had spread – […]
August 10, 2016
Previous Page
Next Page