Top Higher Education News for Monday
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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.

November 3, 2025

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Higher Ed May Be in Trouble If the Government Is Shut Down for Much Longer

Claire Murphy, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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The higher education sector has become accustomed to preparing for government shutdowns in the past dozen years, even prolonged ones. The immediate impacts are well known: A large number of U.S. Department of Education employees are furloughed, resulting in limited support and technical assistance. The awarding of new research grants is stalled. While student aid disbursements and loan-forgiveness plans continue, no one is on hand to process new applications.

 

But what happens if the shutdown persists beyond a few weeks?

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Students ‘Panicking’ About SNAP Delays

Emma Gallegos, EdSource

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Every morning, Arely Solis packs healthy lunches and snacks to fuel her as a full-time student at East Los Angeles College. Thanks to federal food assistance, she says she can focus on her studies rather than on where her next meal is coming from. That changed on Nov. 1, when the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, the federal program that helps feed low-income families, became delayed indefinitely for the first time in its history.

 

Meanwhile, colleges are already hearing from anxious students and their families. Staff members are building up their stores of food, grocery cards, and other donations or connecting students with local food banks. The uncertainty, however, is taking a toll on students.

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Van Ton-Quinlivan: Scaling Allied Health Workforce Solutions

Julian Alssid and Kaitlin LeMoine, Work Forces

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The allied health workforce, which provides specialized care in various disciplines, is facing a critical shortage of workers, including medical assistants, phlebotomists, and technicians.

 

In this interview, Van Ton-Quinlivan, CEO of Futuro Health, discusses how her organization is addressing the shortage through a debt-free model that integrates 40 education partners with data-driven coaching and wraparound support. The conversation explores broader lessons regarding adult learner success and examines how an essential skills curriculum that includes digital badges helps build confidence for adults who are re-entering education.

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University of Pittsburgh Professors Push Back Against Trump 'Compact' for Higher Education

Bill O'Driscoll, WESA

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A group of University of Pittsburgh professors is asking Pitt leadership to publicly reject a Trump administration proposal to give colleges and universities easier access to federal dollars if they agree to a list of conditions furthering the president’s agenda.

 

Several universities have already rejected the White House’s “Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education,” which was presented Oct. 1 to a set of nine schools around the country. Seven of those schools have rejected the compact, saying it infringes on academic freedom.

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Indiana University Lifts Ban on Printing News in College Newspaper

Katie Robertson, The New York Times

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Indiana University has reversed course on its decision to stop student journalists from including news coverage in the print version of their college newspaper, after weeks of intense criticism from the community and accusations of censorship.

 

In a letter to The Indiana Daily Student, David Reingold, the university’s chancellor, said he recognized the university had not handled recent decisions around the newspaper “as well as we should have.” The university will now allow The Indiana Daily Student to use its budget “as the editors see fit” through June 30.

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States Must Step Up as Federal College Aid Crumbles, New Report Warns

Jamal Watson, The EDU Ledger

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A new analysis from The Education Trust warns that the Trump administration's efforts to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education and gut federal financial aid programs are making college increasingly unaffordable for low-income families, potentially leaving states as their only recourse.

 

The report examines state financial aid programs in Illinois, Indiana, and Minnesota, revealing that while some states are making progress, critical gaps remain in helping students who need assistance most.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Making College and Students Work—the Work College Consortium

Bryan Penprase, Forbes

Rankings: The Greenest College Campuses, According to One List

Alcino Donadel, University Business

Retirees as Instructors

Matt Reed, Confessions of a Community College Dean

Commentary: The Talent Pipeline That Built American Innovation Is Drying Up—Especially in the South

Anita Raj, Louisiana Illuminator

EQUITY IN EDUCATION

TCU Moves Race, Gender Studies Departments Amid Political Pressure

Emma Whitford, Inside Higher Ed

Florida Gov. Audits University Spending, DEI Programs, H-1B Visas

Mackenzie LaPorte, WFLA

These Republicans Oppose DEI, But Also Cuts Hitting Hispanic-Serving Colleges

Rachel Hatzipanagos, The Washington Post

DACA Recipients in Texas Await Judge’s Ruling That Could Upend their Lives

Justo Robles, The Guardian

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

'Ghost Students' Are Haunting WA Community Colleges—to Steal Financial Aid

Ann Dornfeld, KUOW

'I Got In!' Direct Admission Gives High School Seniors a New Kind of Hope

Trisha Powell Crain, Alabama Daily News

Penn State Reports Healthy Main Campus Enrollment While Branch Campuses See Declines

Maddie Aiken, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

COLLEGE AFFORDABILITY

Student Loan Limits: Takeaways From a Recent Brookings Panel

Miguel Villa, Brookings Institution

The Push to Make College (More) Unaffordable for Undocumented Students

Leslie Villegas and Madeleine Rodriguez, New America

Education Department Tightens Debt Relief Program for Public Servants

Natalie Schwartz, Higher Ed Dive

How Will 'Trump Accounts' Fit Into the Landscape of Early College Savings Programs?

Louisa Woodhouse, National College Attainment Network

NEW PODCASTS

How the Kaplan Leadership Program Redefines Community College Transfer Success

In the Margins

Workforce Collaboration Requires Checking Egos at the Door

WorkforceRx

Visiting Butler: Sparking a Culture of Innovation

Future U

Free Speech on College Campuses: Insights From FIRE’s 2025 Report

Changing Higher Ed

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

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