Graduates from these schools will go on to oversee and manage the use of AI in hospitals, manufacturing plants, logistics hubs, public agencies and many small- to mid-sized businesses.
At a time of rising income inequality, advocates worry that a convergence of developments will make it even harder to go to college for lower-income Americans.
Every industrial revolution begins by creating a new middle class. The steam engine, for example, didn’t just replace blacksmiths; it generated a workforce of machinists, engineers and factory ...
Parents and early educators have long reported increased aggression, separation anxiety and withdrawal among children when ...
Spring semester at Augsburg University in Minneapolis, where I serve as president, began with the sound of helicopters on ...
The Trump administration cut more than $350 million in grants to minority-serving institutions (MSIs), including Hispanic-serving institutions, arguing that they were racially discriminatory. Colleges ...
Women in education leadership are treated, spoken to and viewed differently than their male colleagues. And it impacts everything from their assignments and salaries to promotions. Here are four ...
Artificial intelligence is already reshaping how we work, communicate and create. For education, the fundamental question is what learning should look like in a world in which AI is everywhere. Over ...
The higher education industry has launched several new marketing campaigns in the hope of reclaiming the message about itself in the face of political attacks and public skepticism.
Admissions counselors welcome admitted students to a presentation on the Augsburg University campus. Credit: Jaida Grey Eagle for The Hechinger Report The Hechinger Report covers one topic: education.
The lesson of the Spanish flu is not that young people inevitably bounce back. It is that institutions endured by waiting. A century ago, that carried limited cost. Today, with a far larger and more ...
One interpretation is that young people increasingly have what anthropologist David Graeber memorably called “bullshit jobs” — work that feels pointless, insecure and disconnected from any sense of ...