Have no fear, use these tips to make college visits as affordable as possible, even if it means you never leave home!
Have no fear, use these tips to make college visits as affordable as possible, even if it means you never leave home!
We've witnessed many students and their families ecstatic to see their financial aid award offer arrive in the mail only to immediately go silent when...
Scholarship deadlines are approaching (some have even passed!) and whether you're a high school senior trying to get that last bit of financial cushio...
As the weather gets warmer and days get longer, it's all too easy for high school juniors to start experiencing symptoms of early on-set senioritis. ...
Financial aid can be a foreign language to many of us. When it comes back, is it final? Can you ask for more? What if your parents lose their job sin...
College search is back. Months after students submitted their applications, they've all heard back and now it's time to pick the right school. With acceptance letters in hand, a college visit can make or break a student's decision to attend, so The Unigo Expert Network has put together a list of some non-traditional, but vital things to look out for on your next college visit.
High school seniors across the country will be receiving their college admissions letters this week, and with the dramatic increase in the number of applications this year many can expect to get the dreaded "thin envelope."
At a recent Columbia University talk on the future of higher education, pretension threatened to overcome reality.
Sarah Lawrence President Karen Lawrence isn't too pleased with her school's popular reputation as a haven for the well-heeled.
Rapturous applause, a movie screening and economy-sized tubs of grape leaves and babaganoush ushered into being Columbia University's Center for Palestine Studies last night, the first of its kind in the nation.
Earlier this year, I received an email -- from my school's student government, no less -- that told me I could "enter the email addresses of up to five crushes per month and see if [my] crush [was] a good crush." What were the future leaders of America trying to tell me? Was I, like a large percentage of my highly educated but socially inept peers, incapable of using my words to ask someone out?
April is admissions time in colleges. Here are a few thoughts based on several years of observing what happens after students get their envelopes, whether thick or thin, and they are suddenly faced with a big decision.
For some, it costs about as much as a Lexus. Every year. We've got 13 tips for you about how to get your money's worth out of college.
Reading our partners' papers, I'm not worried about the future of journalism. Rest assured it exists, en masse, typing away on college campuses around the country.
Our penchant for technology has only made our quest for companionship easier. Want to test if the girl you want has even the slightest interest in what you're doing without putting yourself out there completely? Send along that blank "accidental" text message.
According to the Higher Education Research Institute, the percent of first-year college students who believe that it is very important to help people in need is at its highest level since 1970. Without question, ours is a generation seeking to help.
After the last lecture of "High-Tech Entrepreneurship" -- my last college class -- I had a strong sense I should further pursue GoodCrush. I had begun to attend entrepreneurship club meetings and chatting with angel investors.
Thanks to an infinite number of blogs and the evolving cycle of 24-hour news, we are no longer restricted to news from just a few networks. Sites like Facebook are empowering people to cut through the clutter and discover the content most relevant to them.
College students' mastery of the Mobile Web is an incredible phenomenon to observe, perhaps the greatest manifestation yet of the power of information and communication technology to change our lives. This is why I believe that today's college students will save it.
More than twice as many 18-29 year olds voted for Obama as for McCain in 2008, and one year later the party preferences of college students remain similarly lopsided in favor of the Democratic Party.
Where black students are woefully under-represented in predominantly white institutions, historically black colleges and universities have demonstrated great effectiveness in fostering academic success.