Top Higher Education News for Monday
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.

December 1, 2025

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Are Diversity Essay Prompts Disappearing? Not Yet.

Johanna Alonso, Inside Higher Ed

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Two years after the U.S. Supreme Court banned the use of race in college admissions decisions and in the wake of the Trump administration’s attacks on diversity, equity, and inclusion, colleges’ use of diversity- and identity-related supplemental essay prompts is patchy.

 

After a boom in prompts about applicants’ identities, several universities have scrapped the essays entirely for the 2025–2026 admission cycle. Still others, especially selective universities, have kept the prompts, saying they are the best way to get to know their applicants.

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University Official: Virginia’s Next Higher Education Chapter Must Be Collaborative, Not Competitive

K.L. Allen, Cardinal News

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Virginia’s next chapter in higher education will be written by those willing to break out of long-standing silos, suggests K.L. Allen of Western Governors University in this op-ed.
Allen believes it's time to prioritize credit transfer agreements that actually transfer, to scale employer-education partnerships that remove financial barriers for working adults, and to make skills-based instruction the norm rather than the exception.

 

If collaboration instead of competition takes center stage, Virginia can strengthen its workforce in ways that benefit the entire Commonwealth, not just the few who have historically had the easiest access to opportunity, Allen concludes.

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The Cambrian Explosion of Micro-Credentials

Bryan Penprase, Forbes

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Higher education is currently at a pivotal juncture. Traditional four-year degrees often disappoint employers seeking graduates with job-ready skills, and students are eagerly seeking more flexible academic programs requiring less time and money.

 

New micro-credential offerings from top tech companies and universities are filling this gap—providing modular, flexible, and low-cost alternatives to the traditional college degree.

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'Making Their Dreams Come True': Tuition Waiver Program Helps Dozens of Former Delaware Foster Kids Attend College

Cris Barrish, WHYY

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Freshman Ny’esha James attends the University of Delaware, where she dreams of becoming a teacher. Jenaya Vann goes to Delaware Technical Community College; she's aiming to be accepted into the diagnostic medical sonography program.

 

The young women also share a bond—they both spent time in the state’s foster care system. They're also among 26 students who attend Delaware colleges without having to pay tuition, mandatory fees, or other costs, such as books, housing, and meal plans.

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Most Higher Education Institutions Now Hiring Out-of-State Employees, New Research Shows

Jamal Watson, The EDU Ledger

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More colleges are hiring professionals who live outside the state where their institutions are located, with athletics and information technology positions leading the trend, according to new research.

 

The study by CUPA-HR found that 70 percent of higher education institutions now employ at least one professional residing out of state, up from 63 percent in 2021-22. While the overall percentage of out-of-state professionals remains small, researchers say the steady increase suggests institutions are becoming more open to cross-state hiring to fill talent gaps and meet employee demands for flexibility.

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How Leaders Can Reclaim the Narratives About Higher Education and Rebuild Public Trust

Drumm McNaughton, Changing Higher Ed

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Public understanding of higher education has shifted sharply in the past decade. Emotional narratives travel faster online than measured explanations. Provocative clips outperform thoughtful discussion. Political commentary frames colleges as ideological battlegrounds or failing enterprises.

 

In reality, these portrayals rarely capture the complexity of campus life, education leaders and advocates say.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Shorter Courses? Why These Ohio Community Colleges Want to Offer More

Amy Morona, Signal Cleveland

'Stay Human:' 16 Tech Leaders on How AI Is Transforming Work and What Skills Actually Matter Now

Sydnee Van Woerkom, Utah Business

Why Outrage Is Erupting Over Trump Plan to Exclude Nursing From 'Professional' Designation

Daniel Miller, Los Angeles Times

EQUITY IN EDUCATION

Tribal Colleges in the US Are Under Threat

Dalia Mortada, B.A. Parker, and Scott Detrow, Boise State Public Radio

Tucson Nonprofit Helps Students of Color Explore College Through HBCU Tours

Isabela Lisco, 13 News

The Growing Diversity of Community College Trustees

Kathryn Palmer, Inside Higher Ed

Addressing Barriers to College for Black Men

Rose Todd, Spectrum News

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Even Amid Visa Worries and Other Disruptions, International Students Are Flocking to Utah Universities

Jason Swensen, Deseret News

Meet the Millionaire Masters of Early Decision at Colleges

Ron Lieber, The New York Times

New International Enrollment Dipped This Fall, NAFSA Survey Finds

Ben Unglesbee, Higher Ed Dive

This University’s Enrollment Exploded by 66%, Forcing Boston Residents to Compete With Students for Housing

Tréa Lavery, MassLive

STATE POLICY

Business Group Offers Blueprint to Boost Michigan’s Economic Growth and Opportunity

Kyle Davidson, News From the States

Undocumented Students Face Tuition Barriers as Many States Dismantle Access and Previous Protections

Milwaukee Independent

Are State Data Systems Ready to Track Cradle-to-Career?

Evie Blad, Education Week

Ohio State Eliminates Programs, Seeks Waivers Under State Reform Law

Walter Hudson, The EDU Ledger

NEW PODCASTS

When Selling Your Campus Saves Your University: The NDNU Story

The EdUP Experience

Reimagining Engagement With Experiential Learning

Illumination by Modern Campus

The 'Why College Matters' Campaign

Confessions of a Higher Ed CMO

Can Colleges 'AI-Proof' the Core Curriculum?

Learning Curve

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Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

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