Top Higher Education News for Friday
Lumina

Lumina Foundation is working to increase the share of adults in the U.S. labor force with college degrees or other credentials of value leading to economic prosperity.

August 15, 2025

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Inside a Network of Fake College Websites

Josh Moody and Kathryn Palmer, Inside Higher Ed

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At first glance, Southeastern Michigan University’s website looks like it represents a real institution. A chatbot pops up to ask, “How can I help you?” But littered throughout the website are signs that something is off about Southeastern Michigan. Some images seem likely to fool the untrained eye, while others—like a basketball player with veins bulging from his angular arms—could have been ripped from a poorly illustrated comic book.

 

In reality, the university is as fake as some of the content on its website. And it’s part of a much larger scam fueled in part by the rise of generative AI.

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Anti-DEI Efforts Shutter Cultural Centers That College Students Call Lifelines

Anumita Kaur, The Washington Post

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Khori Davis spent much of last school year at Kent State University’s multicultural center. It served as an anchor for her, a Black student on the predominantly white campus. She studied, socialized, and attended events there, often dropping by between classes for respite.

 

But this summer, the Ohio-based university shuttered its multicultural center in response to a new state law that bans diversity, equity, and inclusion programs at public universities and colleges. At least 12 universities and colleges across six states have taken similar measures and closed their centers this year, citing state or federal anti-DEI efforts.

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Coming Home

Jamal Watson, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

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The small Indian takeout restaurant in Atlanta’s historic Auburn Avenue district hummed with quiet conversation as Dr. Ibram X. Kendi settled into a corner booth, his presence both commanding and understated. Just blocks away, the eternal flame burned at the tomb of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King—a proximity that felt anything but coincidental as one of America’s most influential scholars on racism prepared to discuss his return to historically Black higher education.

 

This August, Kendi will officially begin his tenure as a professor of history at Howard University and founding director of the Howard Institute for Advanced Study. It’s a homecoming of sorts—not just to the Washington, D.C. area where he once lived, but to the HBCU ecosystem that has long been central to his personal mission.

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As Trump Pushes International Students Away, Asian Schools Scoop Them Up

Lydia DePillis and Jin Yu Young, The New York Times

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For Jess Concepcion, a microbiology student from the Philippines, obtaining a doctorate from a university in the United States had been a dream. It was where most of his academic mentors had studied and done research, and he wanted to follow in their footsteps.

 

But when the United States, under President Donald Trump, started pausing visa interviews during peak season this spring, threatening to deport international students, and slashing funding for academic research, he quickly changed plans. Now, other countries are eager to capitalize on those decisions.

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This College’s Strategy for Preventing Dropouts? Classes Half as Long

Miranda Dunlap, Wisconsin Watch

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Halfway through his Monday morning class at Northeast Wisconsin Technical College’s Green Bay campus last month, Patrick Parise instructed his students to hold up their fingers: one if they’re confused about the lesson, 10 if they’ve mastered it. When met with a sea of “jazz hands,” he moves on to review the next chapter.

 

Students will take their final exam several days later, after absorbing major ethical theories and key philosophers’ views in just eight weeks—half the length of the traditional 16-week college course. Administrators and instructors say the intensive pace helps students perform better and prevents them from dropping out when they face hardships outside of school.

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Remapping Higher Ed: Here’s Where Innovation and Equity Are Already Taking Root

Wendy Sedlak and Wayne Taliaferro, Lumina Foundation

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Some of America’s most vital engines of post-high school learning and opportunity are overlooked and underfunded. Historically Black Community Colleges and Predominantly Black Community Colleges play an outsized role in connecting people to learning, credentials, and careers, especially in communities that traditional schools have long underserved.

 

Yet despite their importance in students’ lives, these colleges face tough odds and often go unrecognized. A new study shares valuable and timely insight about these institutions and why they represent models of what higher education can be.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

How to Rewire Retiring Faculty

James Witt, The Edge

Higher Ed 2.0: N.C. Schools Tackle AI

Lucas Lin, The Assembly

Opinion: They’re Killing the Humanities on Purpose

Eric Adler, The Chronicle Review

EQUITY IN EDUCATION

Trump Administration ‘Chipping Away’ at Undocumented Student Protections

Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed

Six Tips for Covering Tribal Colleges and Universities

Denise-Marie Ordway, The Journalist's Resource

Wake Forest University Closes Office of Diversity and Inclusion

April Laissle, WFAE

COLLEGE AFFORDABILITY

College Students Relying on the Texas Dream Act Remain in Limbo With the Fall Semester Looming

Sarah Asch, Texas Standard

What to Know About Connecticut's Expanded Student Loan Reimbursement Program

Natasha Sokoloff, New Haven Register

These Five California Community Colleges Named the Best Value for Money in the US

Roseann Cattani, Palm Springs Desert Sun

Commentary: New Hampshire Is Paying a Long-Term Price for the High Cost of a College Education

Dana Wormald, New Hampshire Bulletin

STATE POLICY

State’s Higher Education Board Approves Strategic Reinvestment Plans for Trio of Schools: Utah, Utah State, and Weber State

Jason Swensen, Deseret News

Chamber Urges Lawmakers to Pass Results-Centered Education Budget

Detroit Regional Chamber

Idaho Committee Looks to Enhance Medical Education in State After Proposed Cuts to WWAMI

Laura Guido, Idaho Capital Sun

Commentary: California, It’s Time to Regulate Your Online Program Managers

Gala M. Ledezma, The Century Foundation

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Webinar: Beltway Buzz: A Discussion of Pressing Issues in Washington

National College Attainment Network

Webinar: The Power of Experiential Learning

The Hunt Institute

Get Better Results for Jobseekers With
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Jobs for the Future

Greater Chicago Food Depository Seeks to Address Student Food Insecurity Through Innovative Legislation

The Institute for College Access & Success

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Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

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