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Affirmative Action Opponents Appeal Harvard Admissions Ruling

FILE - People stop to photograph Widener Library on the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., July 16, 2019.

A group that opposes affirmative action is appealing a federal judge’s ruling that Harvard University does not discriminate against Asian American applicants.

Students for Fair Admissions filed a notice Friday with the 1st U.S. Court of Appeals in Boston. The group says it will appeal all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court if necessary.

It is challenging a judge’s Tuesday ruling against all counts of the group’s 2014 lawsuit against Harvard.

The group says Harvard holds down the number of Asian Americans accepted to preserve a racial balance.

Officials from the group and Harvard did not immediately comment on the appeal.

The suit drew support from the Trump administration and reignited a national debate over the use of race in college admissions.

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International Students Should 'Know How Majors and Grading Work'

FILE - People enter the campus of Morehouse College, a historically Black school, in Atlanta, Georgia, April 12, 2019.

The U.S. college system is different from most others: Students are graded from A to F, and often choose their course of study — their "major" — one to two years after enrolling. Anayat Durrani of U.S. News & World Report explains the differences. (August 2023)

Hoping to Study in the US? Here's How to Secure Housing

FILE - University of California, Berkeley, freshmen Sanaa Sodhi, right, and Cheryl Tugade look for apartments in Berkeley, Calif., March 29, 2022.

AfterSchool Africa takes a look at the finer points of arranging accommodations for international students. Among the considerations: How close is the housing to campus? How safe is it? What about its proximity to public transit?

Read the full story here.

Why Aren’t Americans Going to College?

FILE - College graduates receive their diplomas in 2014.

American college enrollments are falling, even as they are increasing in comparable countries. One culprit could be the cost: while college graduates earn more, the debt they accumulate often wipes out much of that advantage.

Paul Tough investigates for The New York Times Magazine. (September 2023)

Public Universities Went on Spending Spree ... And Passed the Cost to Students

FILE - University of Kentucky students Courtney Wiseman, left, and Abby Lerner walk home after studying on campus in Lexington, Ky., Feb. 16, 2015.

The University of Kentucky has spent $805,000 a day for the past decade on upgrades to its campus, and now has one of the highest tuitions in the country, despite serving a lower-income state. Melissa Korn, Andrea Fuller and Jennifer S. Forsyth report for The Wall Street Journal. (August 2023) [[ ]]

Federal Student Aid Application in US is Changing

FILE- In this Nov. 9, 2017, photo, people walk by Old Main on the Penn State University main campus in State College, Pa.

Every year, most American college students fill out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid. It determines how much need-based assistance you can receive and is also important for many scholarships, grants and other opportunities.

Now, the format is being simplified, as Cheryl Winokur Munk of The Wall Street Journal explains. (August 2023)

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