It found that instead of being charged and having to appear in court, students often were referred to university officials for discipline, and they generally weren’t referred to a campus health center for alcohol screening or intervention. The study, in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research this month, looked at alcohol-related incidents on and off campus at 343 colleges. And follow us on Twitter: and STUDENTS GET OFF EASY FOR ALCOHOL VIOLATIONS: When college students are caught violating alcohol laws, law enforcement tends to go easy on them, a new study finds. Happy birthdays all around! Send ice cream cake, tips and amusing GIFs to or Events. It’s President Barack Obama’s birthday, which he shares with race car driver Jeff Gordon, Law & Order: SVU’s Richard Belzer and Republican mega-donor Sheldon Adelson. 12 event at Trinity Washington University in DC. PUBLIC CAN WEIGH IN ON COLLEGE RATING PLAN: An Education Department committee will hear ideas on how the proposed college rating system can serve its function while minimizing unintended negative effects on students at a day-long public hearing. Apollo has already cut off new veteran enrollment in that program. It’s unclear whether officials are off the hook for one program they admit violated the rule. Apollo’s chief of staff, Mark Brenner, said in a statement that “we still have questions” about how the audit was handled, but he’s “pleased” with the VA’s response. The federal VA office said Friday that a reporting error caused the misunderstanding, the San Diego Union Tribune reports. Phoenix’s parent company, Apollo Education, disputed the state’s claim that students receiving VA benefits comprised more than 85 percent of enrollments in seven programs. UNIVERSITY OF PHOENIX ENROLLMENT BAN LIFTED: The University of Phoenix’s San Diego campus is free to enroll veterans in its programs after Department of Veterans Affairs officials said an audit wrongly found that seven programs violated the federal 85/15 rule. A Friday SEC filing shows ITT extended the letter from $80 to $98 million in anticipation of possible placement on heightened cash monitoring. ITT says the department knew confusion over accounting issues would cause the company to miss a June filing deadline for financial aid data. With help from Allie Grasgreen and Nirvi ShahįOR-PROFIT HEADS OFF SANCTIONS: ITT Educational Services extended its letter of credit in case the Education Department decides to impose new financial restrictions on the major for-profit provider, a spokeswoman tells Morning Education. Presented by Democrats for Education Reform
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |