Plus, homelessness among infants and toddlers
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Weekly Update

A newsletter from The Hechinger Report

Sponsored by: 

SXSW EDU 2026

In this week's edition: Women have outdistanced men in graduate and professional programs as male college-going rates continue to decline, with implications for the economy and even marriage and birth rates. Homelessness is rising fast among a surprising group: infants and toddlers. Plus, colleges and universities nationwide are scrambling to comply with a new federal rule requiring that colleges show that their graduates are prepared for good jobs.

Members of the all-female medical staff at the Heal Veterinary Clinic in Watertown, Massachusetts. Women now outnumber men in veterinary school by four to one. Credit: Lucy Lu for The Hechinger Report

Women far outnumber men in law school, med school, vet school and other professional programs 

Amanda Leef remembers thinking for the first time about becoming a veterinarian when she was 4 and found a garter snake in her Michigan backyard.


“I think every girl goes through a phase of wanting to be a vet,” Leef said.

For her, it wasn’t just a phase. Now, at 48, she co-owns her own bustling veterinary practice, Heal Veterinary Clinic, in this Boston suburb. 


All seven veterinarians here are women. So is the large team of vet techs, and the entire rest of the 22-member medical staff.


“In really broad generalities, I think women are more interested in the emotional and empathetic side of things than men are,” Leef said, sitting on the floor of an examination room with one of her patients, an affectionate, white-furred golden retriever named Cypress.


For that and other reasons, women studying veterinary medicine now outnumber men by four to one. 


It’s not just veterinary school. The number of women has surpassed the number of men in law school, medical school, pharmacy school, optometry school and dental school.


Women in the United States now earn 40 percent more doctoral degrees overall, and nearly twice as many master’s degrees, as men, according to the U.S. Department of Education — a trend transforming high-end work. 


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This week's newsletter is sponsored by: 

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Bring innovative ideas and new strategies back to your community. SXSW EDU 2026 is where you can connect with education professionals for four days of groundbreaking sessions, global networking, and unparalleled inspiration.


Learn more about what to expect in Austin, Texas March 9-12 and register today.

Homelessness is rising fast among a surprising group: Infants and toddlers


For months, Karian had tried to make it on her own in New York.


After the birth of her second daughter, she was diagnosed with postpartum depression, major depressive disorder and anxiety. A single mother who had moved from Boston to New York about 13 years ago, she often spent days at a time on the couch, unable to do more than handle the basics for her daughters.


“I wasn’t taking care of myself,” she said softly on a recent afternoon. “I was not really present.” The Hechinger Report is not publishing her last name to protect her privacy.


Karian’s mother urged her to move back home to the Boston area and offered to house her and her daughters temporarily. She started working the night shift at a fast food restaurant to save up for her own place while her mother and sister watched her children. 


But in a city where fast food wages aren’t enough to pay the rent, her efforts felt futile. And then, a month after moving in with her family, her mother’s landlord told her the apartment was overcrowded and she had to leave. Karian and her girls, then 7 years old and 8 months old, moved into a homeless shelter, where her depression and anxiety worsened. 


“I tried my best, but it’s not their home,” said Karian, now 31.

Karian’s children had joined the growing ranks of very young children experiencing homelessness. Between 2021 and 2023, the number of homeless infants and toddlers increased in 48 states and the District of Columbia. The most recent estimates found that in 2023 nearly 450,000 infants and toddlers in the United States were in families that lacked a stable place to live. That was a 23 percent increase compared to 2021, according to a report released last year by the nonprofit SchoolHouse Connection in partnership with Poverty Solutions at the University of Michigan.  


The numbers could be even higher, experts worry, because “hidden homeless” children — those who are doubled up in homes with family or friends or living in a hotel — may not be captured in tallies until they start school.

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Trump’s admissions data collection strains college administrators


Universities must report student demographics, grades and test scores by March 18.

Failure to submit the data can bring steep fines and, ultimately, the loss of access to federal aid for students.

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Reading list


OPINION: U.S. colleges need more men. Trump’s new policies inadvertently disadvantage them, especially at selective schools

Not considering gender in admissions decisions means taking a thumb off the scale for another population that is falling behind


Tracking Trump: His actions on education

The president is working to eliminate the Education Department and fighting ‘woke’ ideology in schools. A week-by-week look at what he’s done


OPINION: We cannot wait until high school or college to integrate computer science lessons 

The time to prepare young people for a future shaped by technology is during middle school

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