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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.

June 1, 2026

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TOP STORIES

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Why Don't More Mergers Take Place? Here Are Four Reasons.

Graham Vyse, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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As their enrollment and financial challenges increase, more colleges may need to consider merging with other institutions—or forming partnerships with them in alternative ways. Acquiring another college can help shore up an institution’s finances for the future. Acquisition can also prevent an institution from having to close. But mergers also carry risks—culture clashes, loss of institutional identity, and alumni feeling alienated. Many of these efforts struggle—or never get completed—because the merging colleges do not align on key issues.

 

In this interview, three experts offer insight about the obstacles that often prevent more mergers from happening or succeeding.

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As Farming Goes High Tech, Universities Grow New Types of Agriculture Degrees

Miles MacClure, The Hechinger Report/U.S. News & World Report

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On the ground at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, faculty and researchers are working on solutions to the various challenges facing today's farmers while concurrently preparing students for the future of agriculture. The university’s fledgling major, agricultural systems technology, blends hard science, data science, engineering, and management.

 

It’s designed to prepare students for what’s known as "precision agriculture," which uses high-tech approaches to farming that can improve both efficiency and environmental impacts. Along with traditional training, this agriculture degree requires an understanding of data science to enable analysis of information from satellite imagery and myriad sensors that collect details on soil health, crop growth, and water usage.

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How a Father's Detention Shaped His Son's Educational Career

Betty Márquez Rosales, Education Beat

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Jair Solis recently became his family’s first-ever college graduate. It’s a milestone that had once felt unobtainable because of the long-lasting fallout from his dad’s detention in an immigration facility. With the return of the federal administration that once detained his father, more than 100,000 children—most of them U.S. citizens—have had their parents detained or deported, according to a recent analysis by the Brookings Institution.

 

On this podcast, Solis reflects on how his family’s experiences with the immigration system shaped his life and his educational journey.

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The Case for the Community College Senior Well-Being Officer

Thaddeus Mantaro, Community College Daily

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For the 40 percent of all U.S. undergraduates who begin their academic journey at a community college, well-being investments are not a luxury. They are a lifeline, a path to a brighter future, and a means of emancipation from intergenerational poverty. However, community colleges have historically been the last sector of higher education to invest in comprehensive, integrated well-being offices, programs, and services and the last to commit to dedicated, senior-level well-being leadership positions.

 

A growing body of research makes the case for a structural solution: the senior well-being officer, or SWO.

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Pope Leo's Powerful Call to Center Humanity in the AI Conversation

Jamie Merisotis, Forbes

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Pope Leo XIV’s new encyclical on artificial intelligence arrives at a moment of profound uncertainty about the future of human work and human purpose. What does it mean to live a meaningful life in an age of intelligent machines? What obligations do societies have to workers who have lost their jobs because of technology? And how do we ensure that innovation strengthens humanity instead of diminishing it?

 

The Pope is right to frame artificial intelligence as more than a technical challenge: At its core, it’s a moral one. Pope Leo XIV reminds us that the true measure of any economy is not how quickly it produces but whether it helps people flourish, writes Lumina Foundation's Jamie Merisotis in his latest column for Forbes.

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Why College Degrees Matter in the Age of AI

Rita Finkel, EdSurge

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For the past few years, declarations of the college degree's demise have flooded the headlines. COVID-19 exacerbated this trend by accelerating a decline in college interest. Rising tuition costs, student debt, and the AI jobs hysteria only add to this narrative.

 

But the data, and the broader reality of how careers and life actually unfold, tell a different story. Yes, the labor market for recent graduates has become more competitive. Yet college graduates still consistently outperform non-graduates in employment, earnings, and long-term career resilience. More importantly, a college degree cultivates the ultimate asset in a rapidly changing economy: the ability to think critically. This includes understanding AI, as those who do will be better positioned to shape its ethical and responsible use.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Who Will Staff the AI Economy? They'll Be Community College Grads

Antonio Delgado Fornaguera, Work Shift

Higher Ed's Warning Light Is Flashing: What the 2026 EDUCAUSE Horizon Report Reveals

John Johnston, eCampus News

From Completion to Continuity: The Answer We've Been Working Toward

Marty Alvarado, Beyond Transfer

Community Colleges Are More Than Workforce Engines, Stakeholders Say

Chera Watson, The EDU Ledger

EQUITY IN EDUCATION

The Strengthening Institutions Program Grows at MSIs' Expense

Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed

Why I Created the National AI Equity Lab

Shaun Harper, Resident Scholar

PRISON EDUCATION

'Your Circumstances Do Not Define Your Ceiling:' LC State Prison Program Grows

Kevin Richert, Idaho Education News

UW Sees First Incarcerated Bachelor's Degree Graduates Since 1975

Andrew Kennard, WJFW

From Prison to Commencement: College Graduate Rewrites His Future Through Education

KBTX

Success Stories: Augustana College Prison Education Program Graduates Biggest Class

Joel Kellar, OurQuadCities

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Nonwhite Students Now Represent the Largest Share of U.S. College Enrollment

Jacquelyn Elias, The Chronicle of Higher Education

The Rural Strategy: Pittsburgh Colleges Try Harder to Enroll, Retain Small-Town Students

Kellen Stepler, TribLive

Dual Enrollment Puts Valley Seniors Ahead of the Game

Valley Times-News

Opinion: A New Digital Divide: College Search in the Age of Social Media

Ashley Barry, The 74

NEW PODCASTS

Investing in AI-Driven Solutions for Economic Mobility

Work Forces

How Does a Community College Become the School of Choice Instead of the Starting Point?

The EdUP Experience

The Partnership Playbook for Modern Higher Ed

Illumination by Modern Campus

Tough Lessons College 'AI Czars' Have Learned

Learning Curve

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

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