Top Higher Education News for Tuesday
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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 17, 2024

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The Longhorn Long Shot

Liam Knox, Inside Higher Ed

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Getting into the University of Texas at Austin is no sweat for Texas residents who graduate in the top six percent of their high school class. In accordance with a nearly 30-year-old state policy—which, until last year, was the only one of its kind in the country—all those students have to do is apply. After that, they’ll be automatically admitted. The law mandates that at least 75 percent of UT Austin’s admits come from this pool.

 

But for students who don’t make the cut, getting into UT Austin has become about as difficult as getting into Dartmouth.

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When Gown Leaves Town

Karin Fischer, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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The impact of college closures reverberates far beyond the campus. Higher education institutions are often among their region’s largest employers, and their graduates can feed into the local workforce. More than dollars and cents, however, colleges can be cultural magnets, neighborhood anchors, gathering spots, and partners in solving everyday challenges.

 

The dynamic adds a new wrinkle to town-gown relations: Given the tumult in the sector, are there ways that colleges in tough financial and enrollment straits can better prepare their communities for contraction or closure? Could town leaders and businesspeople do more to help support the viability of this critical part of the local economy? And if a shutdown becomes inevitable, can colleges work with them to sustain the community left behind?

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First-Year Performance Among Top Predictors of Timely College Graduation

Amy DiPierro, EdSource

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First-year grade point average, the number of credits earned, and whether students re-enroll at the same institution for a second year are among the strongest predictors of whether college and university students will graduate in a timely manner, according to a study from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center.

 

What students choose as their major also influences completion rates, researchers say. Race, ethnicity, gender, and age are significant factors, too.

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To Dial Down Campus Tensions, Colleges Teach the Art of Conversation

Anemona Hartocollis, The New York Times

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On a warm November day, a group of Columbia University professors set up “listening tables” near the center of campus and hailed students rushing to class, inviting them to stop and talk.

 

Dialogue is an essential part of the college experience. And, as anger over the crisis in the Middle East continues to bring unprecedented upheaval to campuses, it's now becoming a key way for schools to reduce conflict.

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Small-Town Students Can Be Overlooked. Colleges Are Now Looking Their Way.

Kelly Field, The Christian Science Monitor

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For America’s colleges, recruiting more rural students could be one way to diversify their campuses in the wake of a U.S. Supreme Court ban on race-conscious admissions. Students from small towns can bring different experiences, perspectives, and values to the classroom than their urban counterparts.

 

That’s why a group of elite and flagship colleges is trying to grow its ranks of rural students. The coalition, Small Town and Rural Students College Network, or STARS, recently doubled in size, to 32 colleges. It has sent representatives to more than 2,000 small-town high schools in 50 states in the past year alone.

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How to Lead With Purpose in Higher Ed

Sara Custer, The Key

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College presidents are constantly faced with a multitude of competing priorities vying for their time and attention. It can be an overwhelming job, but having a guiding purpose behind every decision a president makes, the teams they form, and the long-term strategies they develop can help keep leaders on the right track.

 

But how do they know which areas deserve their attention and which should be delegated to talented team members? When should they take risks? Three higher education leaders share their experiences of making tough decisions, championing student success to stakeholders, lobbying for greater funding from legislators, and striking out on paths unknown with new partners.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Community College System Chief: Career 'Matchmakers' Are Needed

William F. West, Rocky Mount Telegram

From Classroom to Career: Building a Future-Ready Global Workforce

Vijay Eswaran, World Economic Forum

Views: Accreditors Confront a Crisis in Public Confidence

Larry Schall and Paul L. Gaston, Inside Higher Ed

Blog: Faculty Must Protect Their Labor From AI Replacement

John Warner, Just Visiting

RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY

We’ve Been Tracking Colleges’ Dismantling of DEI for Eight Months. Here’s What We’ve Found.

Declan Bradley, The Chronicle of Higher Education

Continuing the Work of DEI, No Matter What Your Company Calls It

Joelle Emerson, Harvard Business Review

What Research on ‘Sundown Towns’ Can Teach Us About Racism

Dierre Hartman, Open Campus

A Huge Regression’: Walmart’s DEI Rollback Incites New Racial Equity Push

Michael Sainato, The Guardian

How the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation Is Responding to DEI Pushback

Marybeth Gasman, Forbes

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

CU Denver’s New Chancellor Has Engineering Background and a Track Record of Higher Enrollment

Jenny Brundin, Colorado Public Radio

Community Colleges Are Increasingly Enrolling Students With Significant Skill Deficits, Study Finds

Michael Jonas, CommonWealth Beacon

Pinto Promises 60K Student Enrollment by 2035

Joe Carey, The News Record

Women Continue to Outpace Men in Utah College Enrollment

Jason Swensen, Deseret News

Views: Tennessee State’s $43 Million Bailout Is Your College Planning Wake-Up Call

Chris Muller, Forbes

EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT

More Than Half of Louisiana Adults Now Have Post-High School Credentials, a Record High

Ashley White, NOLA

Operation Education: New Report Lays Out State’s College Goals

Kristin Bien, WSBT 22 (Indiana)

Expanding College Financial Aid Will Help Texas Meet Workforce Needs, New Higher Ed Chief Says

Sneha Dey, The Texas Tribune

Portion of People With Bachelor's Degree or Higher in Bay Area Grew, Census Shows

James T. Norman, Community Impact

Opinion: Indiana’s Commission on Higher Education Issues an Eye-Opening Report

Michael Hicks, Muncie Star Press

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Early Indicators of Timely Completers

National Student Clearinghouse Research Center

Under Siege: Campus Racial Climates in Texas Higher Education Amid Anti-DEI Legislation

The USC Race and Equity Center

Webinar: OER & AER: Lowering Textbook Costs While Preserving Quality

Inside Higher Ed

Conditions Under Which College Students Can Be Responsive to Text-Based Nudging

National Bureau of Economic Research

Silence in the Classroom: The 2024 FIRE Faculty Survey Report

Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression

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Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

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