APLU In The News
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Science
Learn how to make labs safer
In April, the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities (APLU) issued its report, A Guide to Implementing a Safety Culture in Our Universities. This important document, as we noted at the time, is more than an urgent call to university leadership to enlist everyone, from senior administrators to incoming students, in efforts to upgrade safety…
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The Houston Chronicle
U.S. Supreme Court upholds University of Texas’ use of race in admissions
The court’s decision provides another example of how race can be used in admissions, but also once again shows a majority of the court thinks that diversity is important on college campuses, said Peter McPherson, president of the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities. “Today’s decision is more than a narrow ruling on the role…
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Inside Higher Ed
Public University Group Backs Risk-Based Accreditation
The Association of Public and Land-grant Universities on Wednesday said it backed an approach to the accreditation process where the agencies focus more time and energy on colleges that have problems than on those that don’t. The U.S. Department of Education also recently has said it supports risk-based accreditation.
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Inside Higher Ed
Turning Research Into a Felony
Indiana University on Wednesday challenged a new state abortion law in federal court, arguing it restricts academic freedom by criminalizing the acquisition or transfer of fetal tissue used for research. The move stands out because the university is challenging the actions of the state that supports it. The dispute also comes at a time when…
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The Detroit News
Obama Overtime Rule Will Cost Colleges
The Obama administration’s new overtime rule, issued last week, is an unwelcome interference to businesses around the U.S. It’s also going to have a negative impact on universities. The White House wanted to wave its magic wand and create higher salaries for many Americans who don’t qualify for overtime pay. Such pronouncements, however, often create…
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Washington Monthly
Which Colleges Benefit from Counting More Graduates?
The official graduation rate that colleges must report to the U.S. Department of Education has included only first-time, full-time students who graduate from that college within 150% of normal time (three years for a two-year college or six years for a four-year college). Although part-time and non-first-time students were included in the federal government’s Integrated…
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Colorado Daily
University of Colorado calculating cost of Obama administration’s new overtime rules
The Obama administration’s new overtime rules could be costly for U.S. colleges and universities, who will now need to pay overtime to some post-doctoral researchers, athletic coaches, admissions counselors and other lower-level salaried employees. The University of Colorado, which employs roughly 30,000 people across the state, is still calculating how expensive the rule-change will be.…
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Chronicle of Higher Education
What Obama’s Overtime Rule Could Mean for Colleges
This week the Obama administration released a final rule that will extend overtime pay to millions more American workers, including hundreds of thousands of lower-level salaried employees on college campuses. Much of the attention has focused on the impact on postdoctoral fellows, the overworked, underpaid backbone of the academic research enterprise. But it’s not just…
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Feedstuffs/Growing Wisconsin
Feedstuffs/Growing Wisconsin
Drawing on the unique academic, research and leadership capabilities of public research universities, the Assn. of Public and Land-grant Universities (APLU) convened a new commission, The Challenge of Change: Engaging Public Universities to Feed the World, to address growing domestic and global food security challenges and ensure universal food security by 2050.
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WBAA/NPR
Purdue Agronomists Join Higher Ed Group Tackling Global Food Security
Top agronomists at Purdue University will be part of a new nationwide higher education task force on food security. The Association of Public and Land Grant Universities is putting together the 31-member commission, which aims to ensure that the world’s rapidly growing population has enough to eat.


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