Trump aims to create a university accreditation process for President Donald Trump’s new executive order

on March 26 in Washington, D.C., the White House Oval Office enforcement regulations.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order on March 26th at the White House Oval Office in Washington, DC. Win McNamee/Getty Images
CNN

President Donald Trump aimed at the university accreditation process on Wednesday with a new arrangement in the executive order, the latest step to checking American university facilities. The
of the order originally reported by the Wall Street Journal aims to be a federal process, determining which universities have access to billions of dollars of federal loans and Pell grants. This is an important source of indirect income for many of these institutions.

The enforcement ordinance will “include acclaimed university formation that includes denials, monitoring, suspension, or breach of or termination for a violation of federal law law,” White House officials told CNN in their signature.

This also leads to “illegal discrimination against American university institutions, including the Attorney General and the Minister of Education, right-wing schools and medical schools.”

Education Minister Linda McMahon pointed out the idea that universities are “meritocratic.” This is a topic that the White House often highlights when it seeks to aim for diversity, justice and inclusion in education and workforce.

The
campaign was overseen by Trump domestic policy, White House officials said as part of their continued efforts to promote the agenda of staff, Deputy Chief of Steven Miller and other presidents for university education.

Trump signed several other enforcement regulations Wednesday afternoon, restructuring and restructuring the education sector after his administration announced a $2.2 billion distant funding at Harvard University, setting major conflicts with academic freedom, federal funding and campus oversight.

A campaign aimed at ensuring that schools train students when using artificial intelligence.

“This is a big deal,” Trump said when he signed the order. “We literally invested $1 trillion in AI,” he added.
The
Executive Order ensures that agencies properly train children and young Americans with AI tools so that they can be competitive as AI becomes more dominant, according to Spicy, a White House staff secretary said before the signing ceremony.

Another order “claim” and Trump administration agencies are accompanied by “enforcement of the laws of books relating to foreign gifts at American universities.” Scharf said these laws require “university specific disclosures” that accept large-scale foreign gifts that are “not effectively enforced.”

The President has also signed an order to set up White House initiatives for historically black universities and universities. During his first term as president, his relationship with HBCU was temporarily worn out, and Trump’s own views on funding the agency were inconsistent.

This story has been updated with additional developments.

CNN’s Alejandra Jaramillo makes this report even deeper.

 

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