Results found for college accreditation | Eastern North Carolina Now

11 Results found for college accreditation

[ Search Users ]

Title   Description   Keywords   Content   Exact
 

On Monday, Gov. Roy Cooper signed seven bills, vetoed two, and let three become law, including the 2023 Appropriations Act, or the state budget, which passed both chambers on Sept. 22.
On Monday, Gov. Roy Cooper signed seven bills, vetoed two, and let three become law, including the 2023 Appropriations Act, or the state budget, which passed both chambers on Sept. 22.
 
RALEIGH: Today, Governor Roy Cooper signed the following bills into law:
 
Longstanding higher-ed oversight practices may well be unconstitutional.
 
Other means of tracking university performance are superior.
 
Program-value and debt-to-income data are sufficient to protect the public interest.
Program-value and debt-to-income data are sufficient to protect the public interest.
 
There has been mounting evidence that the financial payoff from the traditional bachelor's degree is declining, particularly for men.
There has been mounting evidence that the financial payoff from the traditional bachelor's degree is declining, particularly for men.
 
America's national obsession with raising our "educational attainment" level leads politicians and bureaucrats to focus on the silliest of things. Lately, that has been college accreditation.
America's national obsession with raising our "educational attainment" level leads politicians and bureaucrats to focus on the silliest of things. Lately, that has been college accreditation.
 
Tenure-track faculty openings attract scores of applicants. Sometimes the decision makers look for the most competent individuals. Often, however, colleges "recruit" faculty members on the basis of ideological considerations that have nothing to do with true professional standards.
Tenure-track faculty openings attract scores of applicants. Sometimes the decision makers look for the most competent individuals. Often, however, colleges "recruit" faculty members on the basis of ideological considerations that have nothing to do with true professional standards.
 
Higher education is not on a sustainable path. Underlying business models are crumbling, costs are spiraling, and there is for the first time significant doubt in the minds of parents and employers about the value of a college degree.
Higher education is not on a sustainable path. Underlying business models are crumbling, costs are spiraling, and there is for the first time significant doubt in the minds of parents and employers about the value of a college degree.
 
Older     

HbAD0

 
Back to Top