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The University of Pennsylvania has declined to sign onto the Trump administration’s higher education compact, becoming the latest higher education institution to reject the terms of the agreement in exchange for priority access to federal funding.
In a brief statement released Thursday, university President J. Larry Jameson said the decision came after seeking input “from faculty, alumni, trustees, students, staff and others who care deeply about Penn.”
“At Penn, we are committed to merit-based achievement and accountability,” his statement reads. “The long-standing partnership between American higher education and the federal government has greatly benefited society and our nation. Shared goals and investment in talent and ideas will turn possibility into progress.”
A request for comment from the White House was not immediately returned Thursday afternoon. The press office for the U.S. Department of Education sent an automated email saying its employees are currently on furlough during the ongoing government shutdown.
The compact, which the department offered to nine schools, is the latest attempt by President Donald Trump’s administration to exert more control over the operations of the country’s higher education institutions through the allocation of federal funding.
If signed, the compact requires the colleges to cap international enrollment at 15% of the undergraduate student body, prohibit consideration of race, gender or political views during the admissions process, and commit to strict definitions of gender.
With those demands, as well as a requirement that universities alter their governance structures to prohibit anything that would “punish, belittle and even spark violence against conservative ideas,” critics say it would erode the independence universities have from political influence.