American Council on Education

dotEDU: Higher Education Policy Explained

​​​​​​​​Each episode of dotEDU presents a deep dive into a major public policy issue impacting college campuses and students across the country. Hosts Mushtaq Gunja, Jon Fansmith, and Sarah Spreitzer lead you through thought-provoking conversations on topics such as Department of Education policy, college costs and affordability, and more.

Author

American Council on Education

Category

Education

Latest episode

Jul 8, 2026

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Episodes

The One Big Beautiful Bill Reaches Financial Aid Offices 08.07.2026

The One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB) higher education provisions are effective July 1, and financial aid offices are on the front lines of putting them into practice. Melanie Storey, president and CEO of the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, joins hosts Mushtaq Gunja and Jon Fansmith to talk about the implementation challenges, from new program-level accountability require...

The Future of the Education Department's Civil Rights Investigations 23.06.2026

The Department of Education is shifting civil rights investigations to the Department of Justice, a move that undermines the resolution-focused approach to resolving complaints that has supported students and campuses for decades. The dotEDU team breaks down what this latest move to dismantle ED means for higher ed, along with the latest updates on the House FY 2027 spending bill, changes to the r...

New Grant Rules, Accreditation, and the Summer Policy Outlook Video 05.06.2026

The hosts talk live to an audience of ACE Fellows about the White House's new proposal to rewrite the rulebook that governs how campuses manage federal grant funds, along with other higher education policy developments we're watching this summer. Here are some of the links mentioned in this week's show: Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards...

What Will It Take to Rebuild Trust in Higher Education? 13.05.2026

Yale University's Committee on Trust in Higher Education spent a year examining the forces behind declining public confidence in colleges and universities and came back with 20 recommendations for how institutions can respond. Julia Adams, cochair of the committee, walks us through the findings and what they might mean for campuses nationwide.  Here are links to the the report and the policy issue...

Continuing the College Access Conversation 22.04.2026

The landscape for federal TRIO programs has shifted dramatically since we talked about it in January. The Department of Education (ED) has issued new grant proposals that would cut the number of programs by more than half and fundamentally redirect TRIO away from its mission of college access.  We welcomed back Kimberly Jones, president of the Council for Opportunity in Education, to walk us throu...

Student Voting Is Getting Harder. Now What? 08.04.2026

Colleges have spent years building systems to help students vote. Now a mix of federal guidance, investigations, and state-level changes is putting new pressure on that work. ACE General Counsel Peter McDonough joins us to explain where the legal lines are and where uncertainty is creating risk. But first, the hosts discuss the recent higher education policy developments from the past few weeks, f...

Workforce Pell, Professional Degrees, and a Complicated Spring in Washington 20.03.2026

The hosts are joined by ACE's Emmanual Guillory to break down key federal rulemaking shaping student aid. The conversation focuses on the latest developments in graduate loan limits, new rules for Workforce Pell and what it will take for institutions to participate, and the Department of Education's expanded IPEDS data collection.

dotEDU Live at ACEx2026 09.03.2026

At ACEx2026 in Washington, DC, the dotEDU team recorded a special live episode during a session at the ACE Annual Meeting. Instead of the usual format, hosts Mushtaq Gunja, Sarah Spreitzer, and Jon Fansmith took turns posing questions to each other about the direction of federal higher education policy in 2026: how it may differ from the first year of President Trump's second term, what the year's...

A Funding Deal, the Pell Shortfall, and New Federal Pressure on Campuses 19.02.2026

The hosts run a rapid-fire policy lightning round on the biggest higher ed issues right now, from federal funding and a looming Pell shortfall to new graduate loan limits. They also dig into two fast-moving flashpoints: the Education Department's scrutiny of a long-running student voting study and the administration's escalating actions aimed at Harvard, including potential impacts on service memb...

What the Headlines Miss About Higher Ed: A Conversation with Kirk Carapezza 13.02.2026

The national conversation about higher education shifted dramatically in 2025. In this episode recorded in Boston in December, Jon Fansmith and Mushtaq Gunja talk with GBH News correspondent Kirk Carapezza about the reporting landscape and the pressures facing colleges beyond the headlines.  Here are some of the links and references from this week's show:  Brandeis bets big on rebuilding the liber...

What the Future Holds for Federal TRIO Programs 29.01.2026

Questions about the future of federal TRIO programs—academic and support services for low-income, first-generation, and disabled students—come up more than almost any other topic on the podcast. We're joined this week by Kimberly Jones, president of the Council for Opportunity in Education, for a conversation about where TRIO stands and what may be ahead. We begin with some speculation on whether...

What Counts as a Professional Degree in 2026? 16.01.2026

Valerie Fuller, president of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners, visited the podcast to talk about how new federal loan limits will change what graduate students can borrow and why nursing may no longer be considered a professional degree. The hosts also looked at the appropriations outlook on Capitol Hill, negotiations on rulemaking to implement the One Big Beautiful Bill, and more....

The dotEDU Wrap Party for Policy Nerds 18.12.2025

In this final episode of 2025, hosts Mushtaq Gunja, Sarah Spreitzer, and Jon Fansmith spend the hour taking questions on the policy shifts and challenges campuses are watching most closely and the developments expected to matter early in 2026.  Here are some of the links and references from this week's show: Lucy Dacus and Hozier,  Bullseye   Jason Isbell,  Bury Me Stranger Things Season 5 (Netfli...

2025 in Review: A Year That Redefined the Higher Ed Landscape 04.12.2025

The dotEDU hosts look back at a year that reshaped higher education in ways few expected back in January. Mushtaq, Sarah, and Jon talk through their top five stories of 2025, including  the push to dismantle the Department of Education, the cuts at NIH and NSF, the sweeping changes in the One Big Beautiful Bill, and Congress's response to it all. Here are some of the links and references from this...

Judyth Sachs on International Students and a Changing Landscape 20.11.2025

For International Education Week, Sarah and Jon talk with Dr. Jud y th Sachs,  c hief  a cademic  o fficer at  Studiosity , about the pressures students face across borders—well-being, finances, language, and the challenge of feeling at home on campus—and how these issues are shaping the choices international students make about where to study. Sachs also offers a frank view of how "Brand USA" is...

From Big Beautiful Bill to Big Complicated Rules 14.11.2025

The One Big Beautiful Bill may have made headlines but  now comes the hard part: writing the rules. In this episode of  dotEDU , we unpack the Education Department's massive regulatory to-do list, from loan caps and professional degree definitions to new Pell and accountability rules.  But first: the government shutdown has ended.  What's  next?   Here are some of the links and references from thi...

If it's a shutdown, why are we so busy? 31.10.2025

The Trump administration's "Compact for Academic Excellence" faces near-universal rejection from the nation's leading universities , even as the White House continues to look for takers. Hosts Mushtaq Gunja, Jon Fansmith , and Sarah Spreitzer unpack why the c ompact's demands are legally shaky and practically unworkable . Then they turn to UVA's separate civil rights settlement, what it signals fo...

Can They Do That? The White House's Higher Ed Compact and Shutdown Fallout 08.10.2025

The Trump administration's proposed "Compact for Academic Excellence" lands on nine campuses with vague perks and 23 demands, including tuition freezes, international caps, and "viewpoint diversity" audits. Hosts Mushtaq Gunja, Jon Fansmith, and Sarah Spreitzer ask can they do that? —then discuss the shutdown's real impacts, week one of negotiated rulemaking, the stalled $100,000 H-1B fee, and a D...

Congress funded equity and access. The Trump administration calls it discrimination. 23.09.2025

The Trump administration is cutting off or moving funding for TRIO, GEAR UP, and MSI programs—even though Congress approved the money. Hosts Mushtaq Gunja, Jon Fansmith, and Sarah Spreitzer explain what's happening, why it matters, and what colleges should do next. ACE President Ted Mitchell also joins to discuss the need to protect free expression and civil dialogue on campus following the murder...

Demands for Data on Race and the Future of College Admissions 11.09.2025

dotEDU is back for Season 7 with an examination of President Trump's demand for admissions data by race and sex and what that means for campuses. Hosts Mushtaq Gunja, Jon Fansmith, and Sarah Spreitzer—joined by ACE's Hiro Okahana—explain what's being requested, what's lawful, and the need to avoid misleading metrics and protect student privacy. Plus: updates on international students, Harvard's fu...

dotEDU Live: Ask Us Anything About Higher Education Policy 31.07.2025

At the six-month mark of the Trump administration, the dotEDU Live hosts take stock of the landscape for colleges and universities. Kicking off with big-picture questions about how colleges can stay mission-focused and weather sustained political attacks, this season finale also explores the implications of the Columbia settlement, accreditation challenges, visa delays for international students,...

dotEDU Live: The Big Beautiful Bill Has Passed. What's Next? 11.07.2025

https://carnegieclassifications.acenet.edu/ The One Big Beautiful Bill is now law, and colleges are facing a wave of new policies with real consequences for students and campuses. Mushtaq Gunja, Jon Fansmith, and Sarah Spreitzer break down what's coming for student loans, Pell Grants, accountability rules, endowment taxes, and more. Plus, a quick look at what's ahead for FY 2026 federal funding an...

dotEDU Live: What the Senate Reconciliation Bill Gets (Mostly) Wrong 27.06.2025

Hosts Jon Fansmith, Sarah Spreitzer, and Mushtaq Gunja dig into the Senate's reconciliation bill and what it means for colleges and students—student loan limits, endowment taxes, accountability rules, and more. They also discuss delays in student visa processing, stalled federal research funding, and a growing number of legal and policy challenges to programs serving undocumented and international...

dotEDU Live: Pause on Student Visas, Reconciliation in the Senate, and More Pressure on Harvard 06.06.2025

In this episode of dotEDU Live, hosts Jon Fansmith, Sarah Spreitzer, and Mushtaq Gunja offer expert analysis on the implications of the student visa freeze, mounting political pressure on Harvard from the Trump administration, and the House reconciliation bill, which proposes major cuts to higher education funding and threatens financial aid and access for low-income students. Here are some of the...

dotEDU Live: Associations Speak Out as Reconciliation Targets Higher Ed 16.05.2025

Jon Fansmith, Mushtaq Gunja, and Sarah Spreitzer are joined by Steven Bloom, ACE assistant vice president for government relations, about the Trump administration's escalating actions against higher education. Topics include a joint statement from more than 50 associations condemning political attacks on colleges and universities, deep funding and tax cuts proposed in the House reconciliation bill...

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