Skip to content
The Nexus
DossierENTITY

speech-language pathology

Coverage of speech-language pathology in the Nexus archive.

Earliest in view: Jul 9 · 16:45 UTCMost recent: Jul 10 · 16:53 UTC
Co-mentioned in this coverage
Recent coverage
  • POLITICSJul 10 · 16:53 UTCFLORIDA PHOENIX
    What’s a professional graduate degree? Loan confusion reigns amid legal battle.

    The U.S. Department of Education temporarily expanded the list of graduate programs considered 'professional' to 29 fields following a court order halting its previous definition, which had limited eligibility for higher loan caps to 11 fields. The agency defends its original definition as 'lawful' amid legal challenges, causing uncertainty for students and institutions about loan limits.

  • HEALTHJul 10 · 13:10 UTCOHIO CAPITAL JOURNAL
    What’s a professional graduate degree? Loan confusion reigns amid legal battle.

    The U.S. Department of Education temporarily expanded the list of graduate programs classified as 'professional' to 29 fields after a court halted its narrower definition, allowing higher loan limits for programs like nursing. The agency defends its original definition as 'lawful' while urging institutions to prepare for potential changes during ongoing litigation, creating uncertainty for students and schools.

  • POLITICSJul 10 · 10:00 UTCNC NEWSLINE
    What’s a professional graduate degree? Loan confusion reigns amid legal battle.

    The U.S. Department of Education temporarily expanded the definition of 'professional' graduate degrees to 29 fields, including nursing and occupational therapy, following a court order halting its previous narrower definition. The agency maintains its original definition is lawful while legal challenges continue, causing uncertainty for schools and students.

  • HEALTHJul 10 · 07:12 UTCWISCONSIN EXAMINER
    What’s a professional graduate degree? Loan confusion reigns amid legal battle.

    The U.S. Department of Education temporarily expanded the list of graduate programs classified as 'professional' to 29 fields after a court halted its previous definition, allowing higher loan limits for students in these programs. However, the department maintains its original definition is 'lawful' and warns institutions to prepare for potential changes during ongoing litigation.

  • POLITICSJul 9 · 21:58 UTCGEORGIA RECORDER
    What’s a professional graduate degree? Loan confusion reigns amid legal battle.

    The U.S. Department of Education temporarily expanded the list of graduate programs classified as 'professional' to 29 fields after a court order halted its new definition, which had excluded programs like nursing. The agency maintains its original definition is 'lawful' but schools face uncertainty over loan limits amid ongoing litigation.

  • HEALTHJul 9 · 20:04 UTCMICHIGAN ADVANCE
    What’s a professional graduate degree? Loan confusion reigns amid legal battle.

    The U.S. Department of Education temporarily expanded the list of graduate programs classified as 'professional' degrees to 29 fields after a court order halted its previous definition, which excluded nursing and similar programs. The department maintains its original definition is 'lawful' but acknowledges the temporary classifications may change as the legal challenge proceeds, causing uncertainty for students and institutions.

  • HEALTHJul 9 · 19:50 UTCARIZONA MIRROR
    Trump’s narrow ‘professional degree’ rule paused, temporarily reopening higher loans for nurses

    A court order temporarily halted the U.S. Department of Education’s new 'professional degree' definition, expanding eligibility for higher loan limits to 29 fields including nursing, occupational therapy, and speech-language pathology. The department maintains its original definition is 'lawful' but acknowledges the temporary classifications may change as the legal challenge continues.

  • POLITICSJul 9 · 16:45 UTCLOUISIANA ILLUMINATOR
    What’s a professional graduate degree? Loan confusion reigns amid legal battle.

    The U.S. Department of Education temporarily expanded the list of graduate programs classified as 'professional' degrees to 29 fields following a court order, reversing a prior definition that excluded programs like nursing. The department maintains its original definition is lawful but acknowledges the temporary classifications may change as litigation continues, creating uncertainty for students and institutions.