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.

December 9, 2025

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Can Universities Help Students Become Influencers?

Johanna Alonso, Inside Higher Ed

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Since the advent of YouTube over 20 years ago, children have dreamed of skyrocketing to stardom simply by uploading videos of their lives and hobbies. The rise of TikTok over the past decade has further fueled young people’s aspirations of becoming a social media influencer, especially as creators tout brand deals worth thousands of dollars.

 

Meanwhile, surveys show that 57 percent of Gen Zers say they would like to become influencers if given the chance, while 12 percent actively aspire to do so. But few institutions of higher education have attempted to capitalize on that demand. Syracuse University’s new Center for the Creator Economy aims to fill that gap.

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Has the Graduate-School Collapse Begun?

Megan Zahneis, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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When this fall’s new doctoral and master’s students were filling out their applications, there was little cause for concern about the near-term future of graduate education.

 

That’s changed. President Trump’s return to the White House in January brought a cascade of new policy changes, including widespread termination of the grants that fund many doctoral students’ work and proposed caps on how much their institutions could be reimbursed for research. Visa policy changes and an uncertain political climate made international students leery about continuing their education in the United States. In turn, those changes have triggered a destabilization of graduate-school enrollment for both master’s and doctoral programs.

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To AI or Not to AI? Do College Students Appreciate the Question?

Ayana Archie and Lee V. Gaines, NPR

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College students are using artificial intelligence tools more than ever, turning to generative AI to outline a term paper, brainstorm, and find answers to questions that they forgot to ask in class.

 

Some professors are on board with AI; others worry about how the tools can impact education. Will Teague, a professor at Angelo State University, lands firmly on one side of that debate. Teague believes students are sacrificing their agency to artificial intelligence.

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It Took Me 26 Years to Finish College. Here’s What Helped

Jennifer Liberty, EdSource

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In California, some six million adults have some college credit but no degree. For many years, Jennifer Liberty was one of them.

 

Liberty's journey as a comebacker began more than 25 years ago when she dropped out before the end of her first semester at Sierra College. It took her 17 years to reenroll there and another nine to earn a bachelor’s degree at Sacramento State. Now, with a master’s under her belt and plans to pursue a doctorate, she has the perspective to see what would have helped her persist—and what ultimately made it possible for her to earn her degrees. She explains more in this essay.

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Year in Review: The Leading Higher Education Stories for 2025

Michael T. Nietzel, Forbes

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Higher education saw many newsworthy developments during 2025, led by the Trump administration’s multi-front campaign to align the nation’s colleges with the president’s political agenda. Research funding was slashed. Diversity, equity, and inclusion programs were condemned. Accrediting agencies were challenged. The tax on wealthy university endowments increased. Admissions were subjected to new federal scrutiny. International students and workers were targeted. Free expression came under fire, and several universities—deemed by Trump to be “woke” sources of liberal indoctrination—were investigated.

 

Here are 10 of the year’s biggest stories.

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The Education of Higher Education

Andrew Ross Sorkin, DealBook Summit

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As higher education undergoes a time of immense change and reforms, college leaders throughout the country are asking themselves some key questions. What do they believe needs to change? How are their universities preparing for those changes? And what steps are they taking to tackle the persistent lack of faith in today's educational system?

 

Several college presidents and chancellors recently gathered to examine those questions and others in a recent panel discussion on the state of higher education.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

I Was a Red State Governor. What I Saw at Harvard Surprised Me.

Eric Holcomb, The Washington Post

Report Shows California Health Care Jobs Pay, But Waitlists Clog College On-Ramp

Cathie Anderson, The Sacramento Bee

Where Higher Ed and Industry Must Meet

Andrew Potter, The EvoLLLution

Viewpoint: Developing the Workforce for the Data Center Economy

Muddassir Siddiqi, Community College Daily

STUDENT SUPPORT

Students Will Benefit From Systems That Make It Easier for Them to Focus on Learning, So Let’s Cut Barriers Instead of Budgets

Tom Tasche and Ben Castleman, The Hechinger Report

What One Student’s Mentor Taught Him

Ben Gambuzza, The Edge

Kansas Scales Credential Program for Students With Disabilities

Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed

EQUITY IN EDUCATION

Some Colleges Scrap Diversity Questions From Admissions Applications. Will It Change How Students Talk About Themselves?

Freddy Monares, KNKX

Black Student Unions Are Under Pressure—Here’s What They Do and How They Help Black Students Find Community

Antar A. Tichavakunda, Bridge Detroit

Closing Equity Gaps in Career and Technical Education

Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed

Indigenous Voices in Higher Education

Times Higher Education

STATE POLICY

Advocates Offer a Plan for New Jersey’s Future

Dana DiFilippo, News From the States

'This Hurts': NU Regents Back Shuttering Four Academic Programs at UNL

Zach Wendling, Nebraska Examiner

'All the Walls Are Falling.' Shoreline Community College Plans Layoffs

Ann Dornfeld, KUOW

A Youngstown State Alum Planned to Leave the University $100,000. Senate Bill 1 Changed His Mind

Amy Morona, Signal Cleveland

COLLEGE AFFORDABILITY

42% of Student Loan Borrowers Say Bills Make It Harder to Cover Basic Needs Such as Food, Survey Finds

Annie Nova, CNBC

'Nobody Wants to Pay More': Nevada Board of Regents Punts on Proposed Tuition, Fee Hikes

Casey Harrison, Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mapped: The Cost of College Across U.S. States

Bruno Venditti, Visual Capitalist

Commentary: A Bipartisan Step Toward Smarter College Accountability

Beth Akers and Bob Shireman, RealClearEducation

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

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