Top Higher Education News for Tuesday
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 19, 2025

Subscribe to this email

TOP STORIES

download - 2025-08-18T064613.225

At SHEEO Conference, State Leaders Plot a Way Forward

Jessica Blake, Inside Higher Ed

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Concerns about the Trump administration’s crackdown on higher education have loomed over many conferences this year. But as a group of just over 600 state officials, policy analysts, and nonprofit leaders gathered last week in an old train depot–turned–Marriott hotel for the annual State Higher Education Executive Officers Association conference, a different feeling was in the air.

 

This time, leaders still acknowledged the president’s view of colleges and universities as “the enemy,” but they expressed confidence in the mission and power of academia in democracy.

download - 2025-08-18T072353.218

Inaccurate, Impossible: Experts Knock New Trump Plan to Collect College Admissions Data

Jill Barshay, The Hechinger Report

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

President Donald Trump wants to collect more admissions data from colleges and universities to make sure they’re complying with a 2023 U.S. Supreme Court decision that ended race-conscious affirmative action. And he wants that data now.

 

But data experts and higher education scholars warn that any new admissions data is likely to be inaccurate, impossible to interpret, and ultimately misused by policymakers. That’s because Trump’s own policies have left the statistics agency inside the U.S. Department of Education with a skeleton staff and not enough money, expertise, or time to create this new dataset.

download - 2025-08-18T152155.098

Education Department Delays Are Putting Parenting College Students in a Bind

Zachary Schermele, USA Today

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

There are many differences between Carmina Garcia and Mahogany-Ann Fowler. One attends a community college; the other goes to a regional university. Garcia lives in Arizona; Fowler is based in Pennsylvania. Garcia studies nursing; Fowler wants to be an architect.

 

However, the women share two key similarities that place them in difficult situations. Both are moms of young kids. And both are unsure what they'll do in the fall if a federal child care program they've come to rely on disappears about a month into the semester, as their colleges have warned.

istockphoto-2226284449-612x612

Autistic College Students Face Dramatically Higher Rates of Mental Health Challenges, New Research Shows

Walter Hudson, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Autistic college students are experiencing anxiety and depression at significantly higher rates than their non-autistic peers, according to new research from Binghamton University that analyzed data from nearly 150,000 undergraduates across 342 institutions nationwide.

 

The study represents one of the most comprehensive examinations to date of mental health challenges facing autistic students in higher education—a population that researchers say has been historically underrepresented in academic research despite growing enrollment numbers.

istockphoto-2158076795-612x612

Ever Green

Dennis Pierce, Community College Daily

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

As the Trump administration seeks to roll back or end federal investment in clean energy technologies, community college leaders may be wondering what impact these changes will have on the future of sustainability initiatives and green jobs training programs.

 

A recent report from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects strong job growth in occupations related to renewable energy sources and conserving natural resources in the coming years. For instance, the number of technician jobs for servicing wind turbines is expected to increase by 68 percent from 2020 to 2030, creating 4,700 new positions in this field. Researchers predict a 52 percent increase in solar photovoltaic installers during this period, resulting in 6,100 additional jobs.

download - 2025-08-18T080607.803

Early Education Experts See This New Trump Rule as ‘the Wrong Step at the Wrong Time’

Laura Santhanam, PBS NewsHour

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Aspiring early childhood educators who want to pursue undergraduate degrees next year might lose out on federal loans they need to afford their studies. That’s because, ironically, the profession does not seem to pay many of its workers enough to meet new loan standards set by the Trump administration.

 

Shutting off federal loans for these students could turn people away from the profession altogether at a time when teachers are burnt out and leaving classrooms and daycares, early education experts say.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Decoding Student Trust

Colleen Flaherty, Inside Higher Ed

Rehumanizing the Student Experience: Why Higher Ed Must Prioritize Trust, Context and Empathy in Communication

Suze Guillaume, The EvoLLLution

Views: Why Universities Are Hiring More Chief Marketing Officers—Even as Budgets Shrink

Prachi Gala, The Conversation

Blog: When an Industry Doesn’t Cluster

Matt Reed, Confessions of a Community College Dean

EQUITY IN EDUCATION

Colleges Rushed to Comply With Trump’s Anti-DEI Guidance. A Judge Just Struck It Down. Now What?

Camila Gomez, The Chronicle of Higher Education

Trump’s Agenda Is a Direct Threat to the Black Middle Class

William Roberts and Mariam Rashid, Center for American Progress

Charlotte Med School Diversity Data Still Missing as ECU Releases Stats

Michelle Crouch, WFAE

LGBTQ-Friendly Resources, Policies Recede on Georgia’s College Campuses as DEI Rollbacks Continue

Amber Roldan, Georgia Recorder

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Budget Talks: UNT Tackles $50M Gap After International Enrollment Drop; TWU Sees Gains in Nursing, Health Programs

Lucinda Breeding-Gonzales, Denton Record-Chronicle

More Philadelphia High Schoolers Who Plan to Go to College Don’t Matriculate

Rebecca Redelmeier, Chalkbeat Philadelphia

Applicants Approach Elite Colleges With Greater Trepidation Amid Fights With Trump

Lexi Lonas Cochran, The Hill

STATE POLICY

14 New Texas Laws That Will Transform Public Colleges and Universities This School Year

Samantha Ketterer, Houston Chronicle

Federal Cutbacks Shift Education-Related Civil Rights Issues to State

Kiera Riley, Arizona Capitol Times

Opinion: As Federal Support Wanes, States Must Reinvest in Higher Education

Abhinandan Gaba, The Nation

Commentary: California Bill Is a Step Forward for Online College Oversight

Carolyn Fast and Robert Shireman, The Century Foundation

STUDENT SUPPORT

NU President Gold Will Not Keep $159,000 Bonus, Donating Funds to Support Campus Programs

Zach Wendling, Nebraska Examiner

Akron’s Most Selective and Supportive Public Schools Show How Different Paths Lead to Graduation

Andrew Keiper, Signal Akron

luminafoundation.org
Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

Facebook
Instagram
LinkedIn