On Campus Blog

College of St. Scholastica expanding into Arizona
The College of St. Scholastica has announced it’s expanding into Arizona — making it one of the few Minnesota private nonprofit colleges to have sites out of state. Scholastica’s vice president for strategic initiatives, Don Wortham, says the Duluth-based school has opened its first out-of-state site at a higher-education center in a suburb of Phoenix. Read more →
Study: University of Minnesota – Duluth seventh in per-capita drug and alcohol arrests
The University of Minnesota – Duluth has the seventh-largest number of on-campus arrests per capita for drug and alcohol violations, according to a study publicized in The Huffington Post. The campus logged 14.3 arrests per 1,000 students — behind first-place University of Wisconsin – Oshkosh, which had 22.41. The data is limited — and a little Read more →
The marketisation of our universities is fragmenting the academic workforce at the students’ expense Business criteria, not education or the public good, drive what marketised universities do. Universities are restructuring for the new era, ploughing money into marketing and glitzy buildings, designed to appeal to applicants as much as function for those that use them. (Impact of Social Sciences) New Read more →
Students: Feds keep colleges from telling us of thrifty state loan option
Student advocates want to change a federal law that they say prevents many Minnesota college students from finding out about a low-cost, state-run student-loan program. Since 2010, colleges have been required to vet private lenders thoroughly before recommending them to students. Many schools say that’s too cumbersome, so they don’t recommend any lenders at all. Read more →
Macalester, St. Olaf warned about misleading financial-aid language
This week, Macalester and St. Olaf colleges made U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings’ (D-Md) list of 111 colleges that were breaking federal financial-aid regulations. The schools on the list apparently weren’t being clear with students about financial-aid requirements. They led many applicants to believe it was necessary to complete an extra form and pay a fee Read more →
College football recruiters use Twitter to bend the rules The NCAA allows schools to confirm they’re recruiting a specific unsigned prospect, but coaches can’t comment on that recruit’s athletic ability, how he’d contribute to their team or the likelihood that prospect might commit to a particular school. Some coaches and staffers are bending the rules, Read more →
Learning to Think Outside the Box Creativity Becomes an Academic Discipline (The New York Times) Sites like ‘Rate My Professors’ earn mixed grades on campus While many students find these websites a helpful new way to rank teachers, many are also growing the ire of some on campus. (USA Today) Distracted walking widespread at colleges Read more →
Southwest Minnesota State University faces $3 million cut
Southwest Minnesota State University faculty association member Rick Herder tells MPR News reporter Mark Steil the potential fallout of the university’s $3 million budget deficit: “I’m looking right now at a page of programs that they have considered discontinuing or reducing. It includes more than a dozen programs here that could be discontinued or reduced.” Read more →
Congressman: Many colleges are misleading students about financial aid requirements A prominent House Democrat charged Monday that more than 100 colleges and universities, including some in the nation’s capital, are providing students with unclear or potentially misleading information about what forms they must submit to apply for federal financial aid. (The Washington Post) Measuring Colleges’ Success Read more →
University of Minnesota tightening access to some West Bank buildings
The University of Minnesota is shortening the number of hours the public can access seven buildings on its West Bank campus. The move, a pilot project that started today, comes after a last semester’s spike in robberies — one of which occurred in the Carlson School of Management. The buildings generally used to be open Read more →