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College students are back. Here are 4 issues to watch on campuses.

Fall term usually signals a fresh start on college campuses. But continued protests over the war in Gaza, and the related recent resignation of the Columbia University president, are reminders of how tough the spring semester was.

Add enrollment and financial aid processing concerns, and you get a sense of the issues that some schools – and students and families – may contend with in the coming year.

Why We Wrote This

Did the summer offer a reset to roiled college campuses? As classes resume, students face new rules around protesting – and some flux around financial aid, artificial intelligence, and the viability of higher ed.

In New York, Columbia University started classes Tuesday with dozens of pro-Palestinian student picketers blocking a campus gate. So far nothing has been on the order of what the school faced in the spring, when it was the site of mass arrests. Demonstrations have happened elsewhere in the United States, too, including at the University of Michigan and Cornell University. Protesters continue to want schools to divest from companies with connections to Israel. 

“The election and war in the Middle East are divisive topics that will continue to stir emotions, and many will protest,” says Joe Sallustio, a former administrator and host of the “EdUp Experience” podcast. “However, I expect colleges and universities to run much tighter and have less tolerance for open, elongated engagement with protesters.” 

Fall term usually signals a fresh start on college campuses. But continued protests over the Israel-Hamas war, and the related resignation of another president in the past month, are reminders of how tough the spring semester was. Add enrollment and financial aid processing concerns, and you get a sense of the issues that some schools – and students and families – may contend with in the coming year.

In New York, Columbia University started classes Tuesday with dozens of pro-Palestinian student picketers blocking a campus gate, and a campus statue, Alma Mater, being doused with red paint. None of that so far has been on the order of what the school faced in the spring, when it was the site of mass arrests. Demonstrations have happened elsewhere in the United States recently, too, including at the University of Michigan and Cornell University. Protesters continue to want schools to divest from companies with connections to Israel.  

“I think that students will find a way to express themselves, but … many institutions changed their policies and security protocols during the summer,” says Joe Sallustio, a former administrator, and host and co-founder of the “EdUp Experience” podcast. 

Why We Wrote This

Did the summer offer a reset to roiled college campuses? As classes resume, students face new rules around protesting – and some flux around financial aid, artificial intelligence, and the viability of higher ed.

Changes to campus security are one way collegiate life will be different this year. Here’s more on that and other campus topics to keep an eye on this year.

How are Israel-Hamas war protests affecting campus life?

A few weeks before students returned to school, Columbia’s president resigned. Minouche Shafik is one of a trio of women leaders –the others from Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania – who left their positions in 2024, a year that included scrutiny of their handling of antisemitism and protests. Backlash ignited after the heads of Harvard, Penn, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology faced intense questioning from a congressional committee in December. Dr. Shafik appeared before the committee separately in April.

Columbia is among a plethora of schools that updated student codes of conduct and tightened security measures in anticipation of more protests and campus disruptions. The school now requires an official university ID to get onto campus or inside any building. Those not affiliated with Columbia must fill out guest registrations. The University of Southern California instituted the same policy and limited vehicle traffic onto the campus to two entrances at certain points of the day. Other campuses, such as the University of Pennsylvania, won’t allow amplification devices, chalking, and light projections.

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