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.

November 11, 2024

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TOP STORIES

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Outsized Growth at Nation’s HBCUs Sparks ‘Identity Crisis’

J. Brian Charles, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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Morgan State University is on a building spree. Cranes are busy at work across the campus skyline. The sound of beeping dump trucks fills the air. Over the last decade, the school has committed to or completed more than $600 million in capital projects.

 

These investments come as Morgan State experiences unprecedented growth. In the last seven years, enrollment increased 45 percent, from 6,419 undergraduate students in 2018 to 9,319 in 2024. Several other Historically Black Colleges and Universities are experiencing similar growth—and that poses new challenges.

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Education-Level Voting Gaps Are Highest Among Men, White People

Johanna Alonso, Inside Higher Ed

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College-educated and college-aged voters overwhelmingly favored Vice President Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election, exit polls show.

 

The divide in the political preferences of college-educated voters and those without a college degree has grown in the last decade—a reality that concerns higher education leaders who say the gap reflects political polarization. They also believe it could fuel perceptions that colleges are out of touch with average Americans and shows a need to ensure that higher education is accessible to people from all backgrounds.

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TEDx Behind Bars: Prisoners Share Their Stories.

Sandy Hausman, WVTF

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Forty years ago, an American designer and two of his friends hosted a TED talk—the first in a series of lectures about technology, education, and design at the Monterey Conference Center in California. Beginning in 1990, it became an annual event, and now it's spreading through a collection of independent programs focused on local and regional people and issues.

 

This year, TEDx hosted its first event at a Virginia prison where incarcerated individuals told dramatic stories of their transformation through education behind bars.

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Improving the Transfer Process

Kristin Brooks and Emily Tichenor, Beyond Transfer

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Transferring between colleges has historically been a complex, frustrating process, often involving lost credits, financial setbacks, and a lot of uncertainty for students.

 

Recognizing these challenges, the South Carolina Commission on Higher Education is rolling up its sleeves to smooth the transfer journey for students statewide. Through innovative partnerships, data-driven tools, and support programs for faculty, staff and students, CHE aims to help more students move from technical and community colleges to baccalaureate-granting colleges and universities—and beyond—with fewer bumps along the way.

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Perspective: Higher Education in a New Trump Era

Elaine Maimon, The Philadelphia Citizen

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Elaine Maimon has devoted a long career to teaching and leading in higher education with the strong belief that her efforts were serving the public good. During the 2024 presidential campaign, she says she was shocked to hear a vice-presidential candidate call people like her “the enemy.”

 

But today, the country has a new president-elect. And universities must learn from this moment—and remain undeterred in fulfilling their essential role in a democratic society, urges Maimon in this perspective piece on the 2024 election.

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New AI Tools Are Promoted as Study Aids for Students. Are They Doing More Harm Than Good?

Jeffrey R. Young, EdSurge

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At one time, educators were concerned about the dangers of CliffsNotes—study guides that reduced great works of literature to a series of bullet points, which many students used as a substitute for actual reading. Today, that concern seems almost quaint.

 

Suddenly, new consumer AI tools have entered the market, capable of transforming any text, audio, or video into a simplified summary. And those summaries aren’t just a series of quippy text in bullet points. Students can now turn their lecture notes into a podcast, where sunny-sounding AI bots banter and riff on key points. It all adds new challenges for colleges as they attempt to set boundaries and policies for AI use in their classrooms.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

New SREB Report Advocates for Accessible and High-Quality Pathways to Attract and Retain Teachers in the Classroom

Jayla Moody Marshall, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

Despite Privacy Concerns, Higher Ed’s AI Adoption Surges

eCampus News

Rural Iowa Schools Deliver on College and Career Readiness

Grace King, The Gazette

KCTCS President Says Community and Technical College System Is the Biggest Higher Ed Organization in Kentucky

Stu Johnson, WEKU

Blog: Post-Merger Integration: Planning for Successful University Mergers

Drumm McNaughton, The Change Leader

Blog: Academic Freedom With and Without Academic Responsibility

Steven Mintz, Higher Ed Gamma

STUDENT SUPPORTS

Raising SNAP Awareness

Community College Daily

Creating Space for Student Veterans on Campus

Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed

Strategies for First-Gen Students Navigating College and Preparing for Careers

Aimée Eubanks Davis, Forbes

Sacramento State to Create Native American College to Support and Empower Indigenous Students

Emma Hall, The Sacramento Bee

Panel Shines Light on First-Generation Graduate Student Experiences at MSU

Anish Topiwala, The State News

Florida Recognizes University Purple Star Campuses in Commitment to Veterans, Military Families

Danielle Prieur, Central Florida Public Media

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Enrollment Up at Oklahoma’s Public Colleges and Universities, Officials Report

Emma Murphy, Oklahoma Voice

Missed Enrollment, Growth Goals at UC Merced Highlighted in New Report

Alan Riquelmy, Courthouse News Service

FAFSA Fiasco Changed Composition of First-Year Classes at Most Private Colleges

Eric Hoover, The Chronicle of Higher Education

Iowa Board of Regents Optimistic About Future Enrollment

Brooklyn Draisey, Iowa Capital Dispatch

FEDERAL POLICY

JFF’s Federal Policy Blueprint for the Trump Administration

Maria Flynn, Jobs for the Future

How a Lame Duck Congress Can Leave Its Mark on Higher Education and Workforce Issues

Michael Brickman, American Enterprise Institute

What Trump’s Win Could Mean for Student Loan Forgiveness

Annie Nova, CNBC

How Trump Might Fulfill His Higher-Education Campaign Promises

Preston Cooper, Education Next

Grand Canyon CEO Expects a Friendlier Education Department Under Trump

Ben Unglesbee, Higher Ed Dive

Navigating Higher Ed's Policy Shifts in a Post-Election Era

Shelby Moquin, Enrollify

NEW PODCASTS

Building Inclusive, Adaptive Learning Ecosystems in Higher Ed

Illumination by Modern Campus

Improving Public University Systems at Scale

Changing Higher Ed

Championing Economic Mobility Through Education and Innovation

The Future in Context

How to Work Together to Adapt to New Realities

University Business

What Trump’s Win and a New Congress Mean for Higher Education

dotEDU

Beyond the Headlines

The EdUP Experience

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Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

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