Latest News and Comment from Education

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

 



Big Education Ape: THE TAXMAN COMETH (FOR YOU, NOT THEM): A GUIDE TO WHY THE SYSTEM IS BROKEN AND HOW TO ACTUALLY FIX IT https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-taxman-cometh-for-you-not-them.html 





Big Education Ape: THE GREATEST SHOW IN ED-TECH: MICROSOFT'S AI REPORT, OR HOW TO SELL A PRODUCT WHILE PRETENDING TO DO SCIENCE https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-greatest-show-in-ed-tech-microsofts.html 





Big Education Ape: WHO'S BUYING THE MIDTERMS? THE KNOWNS, THE UNKNOWNS, AND THE BILLIONAIRES LAUGHING ALL THE WAY TO THE BALLOT BOX https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/whos-buying-midterms-knowns-unknowns.html 





Big Education Ape: MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JUNE 16, 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/morning-news-update-june-16-2026.html 






Big Education Ape: THE VOYAGE OF THE DAMNED, THEN AND NOW: WHEN LAW BECOMES A WEAPON AGAINST THE VULNERABLE https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-voyage-of-damned-then-and-now-when.html 





Big Education Ape: COOL SCHOOLS RULE: THE POST-PANDEMIC SCHOOL ATTENDANCE CRISIS https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/cool-schools-rule-post-pandemic-school.html 






Big Education Ape: THE TOP NEWS STORIES THIS WEEK 6-14-26 TO 6-20-26 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-top-news-stories-this-week-6-14-26.html 





Big Education Ape: THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH (WITH A DONKEY MASCOT): INSIDE THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY'S FOUR-RING CIRCUS https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-greatest-show-on-earth-with-donkey.html 





Big Education Ape: MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JUNE 21, 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/morning-news-update-june-21-2026.html 






Big Education Ape: THE TOP NEWS STORIES THIS WEEK 6-7-26 TO 6-13-26 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-top-news-stories-this-week-6-7-26.html 






Big Education Ape: TRUMP'S ROY COHN 2.0: WILL THE SENATE CROWN TODD BLANCHE — OR JUST LET HIM REIGN ANYWAY? https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/trumps-roy-cohn-20-will-senate-crown.html 





Big Education Ape: THE ALGORITHM ALWAYS WINS: AI IN THE CLASSROOM AND THE BILLIONAIRE PLAYBOOK THAT NEVER CHANGES https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-algorithm-always-wins-ai-in.html 





Big Education Ape: WILL THE REAL FOOTBALL PLEASE STAND UP? https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/will-real-football-please-stand-up.html 





Big Education Ape: OF ROOSTERS, ELEPHANTS, AND THE LONG STRANGE TRIP THROUGH THE AMERICAN PRESIDENCY https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/of-roosters-elephants-and-long-strange.html 





Big Education Ape: LOOKING BACK: THE WEEK IN REVIEW SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/looking-back-week-in-review-sunday-june.html 






Big Education Ape: FOREVER SCHOOLS: HOW BILLIONAIRES LOCKED UP CALIFORNIA EDUCATION — AND WHY BAD CHARTERS NEVER DIE https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/forever-schools-how-billionaires-locked.html





Big Education Ape: THE TOP NEWS STORIES THIS WEEK 6-7-26 TO 6-13-26 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-top-news-stories-this-week-6-7-26.html 





































DUMBING DOWN AMERICA: THE GREAT UNIVERSITY HEIST OF 2026

 

DUMBING DOWN AMERICA
THE GREAT UNIVERSITY HEIST OF 2026

How Washington's Billionaire Technocrats Decided Shakespeare Was Bad for Your Wallet — And Why Your Vote Is the Only Syllabus That Matters

America has always had a complicated relationship with its universities. We've celebrated them, defunded them, complained about their costs, and occasionally set their campuses on fire — metaphorically speaking. But nothing in the long, turbulent history of American higher education quite compares to what is unfolding right now, in the summer of 2026, as the Trump administration's Department of Education drops what may be the most consequential — and most philosophically bankrupt — education policy in modern American history: the Student Tuition and Transparency System, or STATS. Because nothing says "we respect your education" quite like reducing it to a spreadsheet.

The Grand Premise: If It Doesn't Pay, It Doesn't Exist



Let's start with the core idea, because it deserves to be examined in the full, unflattering light of day.

The STATS rule, finalized on June 29, 2026 — one day before it was set to take effect — declares, with the confidence of a man who has never read a poem, that the sole measure of a college program's worth is how much money its graduates make four years after graduation.

That's it. That's the whole philosophy.

Not whether graduates become better citizens. Not whether they contribute to culture, democracy, or the moral fabric of society. Not whether they teach your children, nurse your parents, or write the stories that remind us what it means to be human. Just: did the spreadsheet clear the bar?

Under the rule's "Earnings Premium Measure":

  • Undergraduate programs must prove their graduates out-earn a typical high school diploma holder (ages 25–34) in their state.
  • Graduate programs must prove their graduates out-earn a typical bachelor's degree holder — a baseline that conveniently includes armies of software engineers and finance bros. 

Fail that test two out of three consecutive years? Lose federal Direct Loan eligibility. Fail three years straight? Lose all Title IV fundingPell Grants included. And if more than half of a university's total federal dollars flow to "low-earning" programs? The entire institution gets placed on provisional status.

The Department of Education projects that roughly 6% of all academic programs nationwide will fail this initial test. But here's where the math gets brutally honest: while only about 2.1% of traditional four-year programs are expected to fail, an estimated 35% of for-profit college programs will fall short. So the rule that was sold as "holding everyone accountable" will, in practice, function as a wrecking ball aimed squarely at the already-vulnerable.

The Arts & Humanities: First Against the Wall

If you majored in theater, philosophy, history, literature, or fine arts — congratulations. The federal government has officially decided your degree is a financial liability.

The arts and humanities are disproportionately vulnerable for a reason that is almost comically unfair: early-career salaries in these fields are frequently right on the line of the earnings threshold, even though humanities graduates often catch up and surpass peers over a lifetime. The rule, however, only looks at year four. Year four, when your English major is still writing their first novel and your theater graduate is still waiting tables between auditions.

Graduate programs face an even steeper cliff. A master's in history or an MFA in creative writing must prove its graduates out-earn the average bachelor's degree holder — a group that includes high-earning tech workers and Wall Street analysts. As the Association of American Universities (AAU) and the American Council on Education (ACE) argued in their formal comment letters: this is not a comparison group. It is a trap.

Their arguments were pointed and correct:

  • The "Public Value" Problem: Fields like history, literature, and visual arts generate immense cultural, civic, and democratic value that a wage premium metric is constitutionally incapable of measuring.
  • The Flawed Baseline Problem: Comparing a humanities master's graduate to all bachelor's degree holders — including Silicon Valley engineers — is not science. It is theater. Bad theater, at that.

Universities, already running the numbers before the first official accountability data drops in 2027, are scrambling into survival mode. Expect to see:

  • History BAs suddenly requiring mandatory data analytics tracks — because nothing enriches the study of the Civil War like a pivot table.
  • MFA programs quietly opting out of federal loans entirely, using the rule's "voluntary safe harbor" provision to insulate themselves from federal shutdown.
  • Entire humanities departments being merged, consolidated, or quietly euthanized. 

Teachers: The Profession That Flunked a Test It Wasn't Allowed to Study For



If the arts and humanities are the rule's most visible victims, teacher preparation programs are its most consequential ones — and the damage here doesn't stay on campus. It walks into every K-12 classroom in America.

The National Education Association (NEA) has explicitly warned that the STATS rule threatens to "decimate the pipeline of trained public educators." Here's why.

Public school teacher salaries are not set by market competition. They are set by local tax bases and state salary schedules — rigid, politically determined, and chronically underfunded in large swaths of the country. The STATS rule doesn't care. It applies the same cold ROI math regardless.

The damage falls unevenly:

  • Undergraduate teacher prep programs (BA/BS) mostly survive — entry-level teaching salaries generally clear the high-school-diploma baseline. Mostly.
  • Early Childhood Education (ECE) programs are a disaster waiting to happen. With a national median salary of roughly $27,000, undergraduate ECE programs in multiple states will fall below the earnings of local high school diploma holders. The federal government is about to defund the people who teach your toddlers. 
  • Graduate education programs (MA, M.Ed, Ed.D) face near-certain failure in low-wealth states. A school principal or curriculum director with a master's degree — in states with depressed teacher pay — often earns less than the average corporate worker with only a bachelor's. Under STATS, that master's program loses federal loan eligibility. The pipeline freezes. 

The consequences cascade:

  1. Federal Direct Loans are stripped from failing programs.
  2. New enrollments are halted.
  3. Aspiring teachers are forced onto private, higher-interest loans — or out of the profession entirely.
  4. School districts, already hemorrhaging staff, lose the institutional pipeline that trained their replacements.

The NEA and university coalitions are lobbying furiously for regional cost-of-living adjustments to the benchmarks, arguing it is fundamentally absurd to judge a rural Mississippi teacher's salary against a statewide median inflated by Atlanta or Memphis corporate hubs.

The Courts Step In — But the Damage Doesn't Wait

On June 24, 2026 — one week before the policy was set to take effect — U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell issued a preliminary injunction blocking one of the rule's most punishing provisions: the Department of Education's narrowed definition of a "professional degree."

The administration had quietly restricted the "professional degree" classification — which carries a higher federal loan cap of $50,000 annually — to just 11 specific fields, mostly doctoral-level: medicine, law, dentistry, pharmacy, theology. Fields like nursing, social work, public health, and education — including school principals, counselors, and special education administrators — were explicitly excluded and shoved into the lower $20,500 annual cap tier.

The NEA, the American Association of Colleges of Nursing, and several health organizations sued. Judge Howell ruled in their favor on two grounds:

  • Exceeding Congressional Intent: Congress anchored the "professional degree" definition to an existing 2007 regulatory framework. The administration didn't have the authority to unilaterally narrow it.
  • Administrative Procedure Act Violations: The agency's justification was, in the court's assessment, arbitrary and likely contrary to federal law. 

The injunction is a win. But it is a partial, provisional, and deeply insufficient win. The overall loan caps mandated by Congress still went live on July 1. Universities are in financial aid limbo for the upcoming academic year, operating under older guidelines while the agency scrambles to issue a formal response. Students don't know what they can borrow. Institutions don't know what they can offer. And the clock is ticking.

The Billionaire Blueprint: Technocrats Don't Need Philosophers



Let's be honest about what this is, because the policy's architects have been fairly transparent about it.

This is not an education reform. It is an economic conversion — the systematic transformation of American universities from institutions of learning into credentialing factories optimized for workforce outputs that serve the tech and business sectors.

The STATS rule is the higher education chapter of a longer story that began in K-12, where billionaire-backed "reform" movements spent two decades defunding public schools, expanding charter networks, and reframing education as a product to be consumed rather than a public good to be invested in. The same logic — education must prove its ROI or be eliminated — has now been elevated to the university level, written into federal law, and armed with the power to strip institutions of federal funding.

The rule was authorized by the "One Big Beautiful Bill Act", signed on July 4, 2025 — a piece of legislation that, among other things, eliminated the Grad PLUS loan program, capped graduate borrowing, and handed the Department of Education the authority to build exactly this kind of accountability framework.

The technocrats designing this system are not asking: "What does America need from its universities?" They are asking: "What do our industries need from the workforce?" Those are not the same question. They have never been the same question. And the difference between them is, roughly speaking, the entire history of human civilization.

A society that cannot produce historians has no memory. A society that cannot produce philosophers has no conscience. A society that cannot produce artists has no soul. And a society that cannot produce teachers has no future — which is, perhaps, precisely the point.

The Only Syllabus That Matters Now

Here is the uncomfortable truth that no amount of legal injunctions, lobbying campaigns, or university press releases can paper over: the courts can slow this down, but they cannot stop it. Judge Howell's injunction is real, but it is temporary. The STATS framework is real, and it is live. The damage to institutions, to faculty, to students planning their futures around programs that may not exist in 2028 — that damage is already happening.

Universities are already closing humanities programs. Faculty are already receiving non-renewal notices. High school seniors are already being counseled away from majors that a federal algorithm has pre-condemned. The chilling effect doesn't wait for the accountability clock to strike 2027.

The billionaire oligarchy reshaping American education — from the K-12 voucher wars to the STATS rule — is operating on a clear and coherent vision: a nation of skilled workers, not educated citizens. Coders, not critics. Technicians, not thinkers. People who can execute a task, not people who can question whether the task should be done at all.

That vision has a weakness, and it is a beautiful one: it requires your consent. It requires that you stay home on Election Day. It requires that you treat your vote as a transaction rather than a statement of what kind of country you want to live in.

The arts teach us to imagine worlds that don't yet exist. The humanities teach us to learn from the worlds that did. The teachers carry all of it forward, generation by generation, into classrooms that are — right now, today — waiting to find out if the federal government will fund the people who fill them.

Vote like the future depends on your vote. Because, as any good history teacher could tell you — if we still have any left — it does.


Sources:


 Source List: Dumbing Down America — The Death of the American University


🏛️ I. The STATS Rule — Core Policy Documents

1. U.S. Department of Education — STATS Final Rule Press Release The official announcement of the finalized Student Tuition and Transparency System rule. 🔗 https://www.ed.gov/about/news/press-release/us-department-of-education-issues-final-rule-hold-all-colleges-and-universities-accountable-low-earning-programs


2. Federal Register — Accountability in Higher Education & Demand-Driven Workforce Pell / STATS Proposed Rule (April 20, 2026) The full regulatory text published in the Federal Register, including the earnings premium framework, penalty timelines, and exemptions. 🔗 https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2026/04/20/2026-07666/accountability-in-higher-education-and-access-through-demand-driven-workforce-pell-student-tuition


📊 II. Analysis & Advocacy — Higher Education Groups

3. National College Attainment Network (NCAN) — "What STATS Means for Students and Colleges" (April 29, 2026) A detailed breakdown of the rule's impact on students, programs, and institutional eligibility — including the earnings premium benchmarks and penalty triggers. 🔗 https://www.ncan.org/Web/Web/news/Proposed-Accountability-Rules--What-STATS-Means-for-Students-and-Colleges.aspx


4. The Institute for College Access & Success (TICAS) — "Ahead of Neg-Reg Session 2 Recap" (January 2026) Covers the negotiated rulemaking sessions that shaped STATS, including the elimination of the debt-to-earnings test and the shift to a pure earnings premium model. 🔗 https://ticas.org/accountability/ahead-neg-reg-session-2-recap-jan-2026/


5. Holland & Knight — "U.S. Department of Education Proposes Earnings Premium Metric" (April 2026) A legal analysis of the proposed rule's structure, implementation timeline, and what institutions need to prepare for before the July 1, 2026 effective date. 🔗 https://www.hklaw.com/en/insights/publications/2026/04/us-department-of-education-proposes-earnings-premium-metric


⚖️ III. The Court Injunction — Judge Howell's Ruling

6. The Hill — "Judge Blocks New Professional Student Loan Restrictions" (June 2026) News coverage of U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell's preliminary injunction blocking the DOE's narrowed "professional degree" definition. 🔗 https://thehill.com/homenews/education/5941405-federal-judge-blocks-loan-limits/


7. Inside Higher Ed — "Judge Tosses 'Professional' Degree Definition" (June 25, 2026) In-depth reporting on the NEA and nursing coalition lawsuit, Judge Howell's two-part ruling, and the immediate impact on graduate student borrowing. 🔗 https://www.insidehighered.com/news/government/student-aid-policy/2026/06/25/judge-tosses-professional-degree-definition


8. Education Week — "Judge Voids Trump Admin. Rule Excluding Education from Professional Degrees" (June 2026) Focuses specifically on the K-12 and teacher preparation impact of the court ruling, including the NEA's arguments about school administrators and counselors. 🔗 https://www.edweek.org/policy-politics/judge-voids-trump-admin-rule-excluding-education-from-professional-degrees/2026/06


9. Duane Morris Law — "Navigating Uncertainty After Federal Court Stays Department of Education's Narrowed Definition" (June 2026) Legal analysis of the injunction's scope, what institutions must do now, and how the older 2007 regulatory framework applies in the interim. 🔗 https://www.duanemorris.com/alerts/navigating_uncertainty_after_federal_court_stays_department_educations_narrowed_definition_0626.html


🗂️ Quick Reference Summary Table

#SourceTopicType
U.S. Dept. of EducationSTATS Final RuleOfficial Gov.
Federal RegisterFull Regulatory TextOfficial Gov.
NCANStudent/Program ImpactAdvocacy Analysis
TICASNeg-Reg & Rule HistoryPolicy Research
Holland & KnightLegal/Institutional AnalysisLaw Firm Brief
The HillCourt Injunction NewsNews Media
Inside Higher EdProfessional Degree RulingNews Media
Education WeekK-12 / Teacher ImpactNews Media
Duane Morris LawInjunction Legal AnalysisLaw Firm Brief

All links verified as of June 30, 2026. For the most current legal status of the injunction and rule implementation, check the Federal Register and Inside Higher Ed daily — this story is moving fast.