INDIANAPOLIS — Big funding cuts are largely eliminating a program in Indiana that helps at-risk students graduate and succeed after high school. Most of the money for the "JAG" program is now gone.
Federally funded TRIO programs, which help low-income and first-generation college students, are facing funding delays and potential elimination. Local agencies and universities in the Coastal Bend ...
What’s Next? Louisburg-backed school lunch verification bill heads to Kansas House.
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (WFIE) - Cuts to the state budget mean classes at certain schools across Indiana will not be offered this coming school year. At least eight schools in the area are losing a program ...
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WATE) — Funding freezes and proposed cuts by the Trump administration have led to the elimination of TRIO or Upward Bound Programs. These are nationwide grant-based programs funded ...
48 Purdue University degree programs are at risk under a new Indiana law requiring minimum graduate numbers. A Purdue professor criticized the law, citing its problematic metrics and potential ...
Hawaii public schools face deepening uncertainty as President Donald Trump’s administration withholds $33.29 million in congressionally appropriated education funds for the upcoming academic year, a ...
This article was produced as part of Humanities DC’s Community Journalism Program. As nearly 100,000 D.C. youth finished their enrollment in May for the upcoming 2025–26 school year, certain at-risk ...
District-backed AB 2121 would let colleges replace lost MSI and TRIO funding without penalty under the 50% law.
Citing concerns about student safety, a state audit found that several private special education programs failed to perform criminal background checks and employee history verification requirements.