Top Higher Education News for Monday
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Lumina Foundation is committed to increasing the proportion of Americans with high-quality degrees, certificates and other credentials to 60 percent by 2025.

December 2, 2024

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TOP STORIES

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Trump’s Vision for College Accreditation Could Shake Up the Sector

Eric Kelderman, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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President-elect Donald Trump and his allies have floated a number of changes for higher education, such as barring accreditors from requiring that colleges adhere to diversity, equity, and inclusion standards. Republicans have also proposed creating new accrediting agencies that promote conservative values and allow state governments to take on the role of accreditors.

 

Much of Trump’s sweeping accreditation vision will take considerable time, require legislation or new regulations, and likely be challenged in court. Still, the inevitable disruption could cast a shadow of uncertainty for students concerned whether the colleges they attend will remain accredited.

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How the WWE Shaped Linda McMahon

Josh Moody, Inside Higher Ed

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The nomination of World Wrestling Entertainment's co-founder Linda McMahon as the next education secretary is sparking a wide range of reactions. Some online commentators are poking fun at the nominee and the carnival atmosphere of WWE, while others are embracing the image of McMahon as a fighter ready to bend the U.S. Department of Education to her will.

 

The diverse mix of responses shows how polarizing Donald Trump’s pick is and what lies ahead for McMahon as she gears up for a confirmation hearing to lead the agency that Trump says he wants to eliminate.

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UCLA's Fall Class Bucks Trend of Diversity Decline at Elite Colleges After Affirmative Action Ban

Teresa Watanabe, Los Angeles Times

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While other elite universities around the nation have seen precipitous declines in diversity in their first class enrolled after the U.S. Supreme Court banned affirmative action, the University of California, Los Angeles, is bucking that trend with record numbers of Black and Latino students.

 

Admission counselors credit UCLA's diversity success to a number of factors, including concerted efforts to build connections with high schools, community organizations, and families whose students the university wants to attract. UCLA faculty members of diverse backgrounds also have become more involved in the recruitment process—helping students like Madison Hamilton, who is Black, see themselves in their success.

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Understanding the Crisis of Confidence in Higher Education

Drumm McNaughton, Changing Higher Ed

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Higher education is suffering from a reputation crisis, with public confidence in the sector declining dramatically. In 2015, a Gallup poll revealed that the vast majority of Americans expressed a great deal of confidence in higher education, with only 10 percent reporting little to no confidence. By 2024, public confidence had shifted significantly.

 

On this podcast, Lumina Foundation's Courtney Brown discusses the causes and solutions behind this confidence crisis—and why it also creates an opportunity for colleges and universities to transform their services to better support the needs of today's learners.

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Facing Legal Threats, Colleges Back Off Race-Based Programs

Laura Pappano and Joanna Hou, The Hechinger Report

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As a low-income, first-generation student from both Minneapolis and St. Paul, Jocelyn Ricard credits the Multicultural Summer Research Opportunities Program, known as MSROP, for changing the trajectory of her life and her college career.

 

Today, however, MSROP no longer exists. Following the June 2023 U.S. Supreme Court decision banning colleges from considering race in admissions and a wave of state laws curbing campus diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts, such pipeline programs, along with race- and gender-based affinity mentoring circles and scholarships, are facing fire.

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Trump Team Eyes Quick Rollback of Biden Student Debt Relief

Michael Stratford, POLITICO

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President-elect Donald Trump is poised to pull the plug on President Joe Biden’s years-long push to cancel student debt for tens of millions of people as Republicans sweep into power in the coming months.

 

The move would be the culmination of nearly four years of attacks by GOP lawmakers and attorneys general on Biden’s student debt relief policies. On the campaign trail, Trump slammed the loan forgiveness efforts—which total hundreds of billions of dollars. Yet his team faces a daunting challenge: A series of recent court decisions has left the federal government’s $1.6 trillion student loan portfolio in disarray, with millions of borrowers stuck in limbo.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Community College 'Deserts' Deter Texas Students From Getting a Degree, Report Says

Sneha Dey, The Texas Tribune

Should You Still Learn to Code in an A.I. World?

Sarah Kessler, The New York Times

Educators Share What Teaching Means to Them

Harriet Gaye and Nancy Gonzales, GBH News

How Better Accountability Can Propel Innovative Short-Term Credentials

Alcino Donadel, University Business

Commentary: Myths Hold Back Community College Bachelor’s Degree Programs

Cecilia Rios-Aguilar, Debra Bragg, and Elizabeth Meza, EdSource

Views: To Truly Boost Our Workforce, Utah Must Embrace Work-Based Learning Pathways

Courtney Hills McBeth and Mallory Dwinal-Palisch, The Salt Lake Tribune

STUDENT SUPPORTS

Few Virginia Universities Have Studied Food Insecurity Among Students, Though 80% Say It’s an Issue

Nathaniel Cline, Virginia Mercury

Reimagining Computer Labs for Today’s College Students

Alexander Slagg, EdTech Magazine

Tidewater Community College Offers On-Campus Child Care to Students, Community

Megan Pauly, Virginia Public Media

Mesa Community Court, Mesa Community College Partner to Help Curb Homelessness Through Education

Hayden Larkin, Cronkite News

Report: Understanding First-Year Students

Ashley Mowreader, Inside HIgher Ed

Chattanooga State Works to Change Culture Around Tutoring, Improve Pathways to Student Success

Shannon Coan, Chattanooga Times Free Press

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Cal State University Cuts Add Frustration, Graduation Time to Some Students’ Plans

Adolfo Guzman-Lopez, LAist

UW Eyes Part-Time, Nontraditional Students to Reverse Declining Enrollment

Jeff Victor, Wyoming Public Radio

Trade School Enrollments Spike During and After Pandemic

Mark J. Drozdowski, BestColleges

Howard University’s Record Applications Show Boom in Black Colleges

Nic Querolo and Aashna Shah, Bloomberg

More San Diego Unified Students Are Taking College Courses Than Ever Before

Jakob McWhinney, Voice of San Diego

FEDERAL POLICY

Labor Secretary Nomination Turns Heads on Both Sides of the Aisle

Paul Fain, Work Shift

Linda McMahon’s Metamorphosis: Ed Nominee’s Journey Mirrors the GOP’s Turn to Trump

Linda Jacobson, The 74

Higher Ed Leaders Discuss Future for Federal Financial Aid Programs

WisBusiness

Opinion: Don’t Write Off Workforce Pell Grants

Preston Cooper, American Enterprise Institute

NEW PODCASTS

Navigating the Challenges of First-Generation College Students

Siendo Primero Podcast

Developing a Tech Mindset at the Leadership Table

Future U

How School Counselors Can Drive Change in Education

College Admissions Decoded

Community, Partnerships, and Purpose

The EdUP Experience

Supporting College Students in Rural Areas

Evidence First

What Is Missing in the Lives of America’s Young People?

Aspen Ideas to Go

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

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