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More than three years after ChatGPT debuted, AI has become a part of everyday life — and professors and students are still figuring out how or if they should use it.
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Martin University will pause operations at the end of the current semester due to ongoing financial and enrollment challenges, the Board of Trustees announced.
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All 15 public colleges in Indiana will freeze in-state undergraduate tuition and fees for two years in response to Gov. Mike Braun’s request.
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Purdue declined to provide the total number of those impacted but said it continues to support those students.
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The vast majority of Indiana high school students and their parents believe that training and education beyond high school is important and worth the cost.
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Indiana University Indianapolis announced this week it will bring the Groups Scholars Program to its campus next year. The program provides academic, financial and social support to first-generation and underrepresented college students to help them obtain a bachelor’s degree.
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Indiana is still lagging on a goal to boost how many working-age adults have training and education beyond their high school diplomas.
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The law requires public universities and colleges to release information about proven acts of hazing on their websites.
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Problems with the rollout of a new form has prevented many colleges from offering financial aid packages and left students confused about how much aid they're eligible to receive as important deadlines roll by.
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Lawmakers reach the halfway point of the 2024 session and send the first bill to the governor, the Senate advances a bill that could change tenure in higher ed, and legislation heads to the House to expand access to disaster relief.