Top Higher Education News for Wednesday
Lumina

Lumina Foundation is committed to increasing the proportion of Americans with high-quality degrees, certificates and other credentials to 60 percent by 2025.

November 13, 2024

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It Used to Be a Notoriously Violent Prison. Now It’s Home to a First-of-Its Kind Higher Education Program

Wayne D'Orio, The Hechinger Report

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Despite receiving five life sentences, Michael Mariscal, 32, believes he "can still live a meaningful life" in prison.

 

Mariscal’s words exemplify everything officials at Cal Poly Humboldt hoped to accomplish when they set out to create a satellite campus at one of the most notorious prisons in the country. They knew that earning a degree could help some men shorten their sentences and possibly land well-paying jobs once released. But they also hoped that the classes, and the camaraderie fostered there, would pay immediate dividends, lessening violence at Pelican Bay State Prison and improving students’ daily behaviors.

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The New Student-Ready College

Michael Horn and Jeff Selingo, Future U

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College-going rates have increased over recent decades, but the same cannot be said of completion rates. Mike Larsson wants to change that.

 

Larsson is the co-founder and CEO of Duet, an organization collaborating with Southern New Hampshire University to provide on-the-ground coaching and physical space for students. On this podcast, Larsson explores the significance of wraparound supports in encouraging more students to complete their degrees, strategies for re-engaging students who have dropped out, and the emergence of the "hybrid college."

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Borrowers Grapple With What Trump’s Win Means for Their Student Loan Debt

Cheyanne Mumphrey, The Associated Press

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The economy was an important issue in the 2024 presidential election, helping to propel Donald J. Trump to victory. But for borrowers, concerns about their finances extend beyond inflation to include their student debt. Just ask Savannah Britt.

 

Britt owes about $27,000 on loans she took out to attend college at Rutgers University, a debt she was hoping to see reduced by the Biden administration's student loan forgiveness efforts. Her payments are currently on hold while courts untangle challenges to the loan forgiveness program. But as the weeks tick down on Biden’s time in office, she could soon face a monthly payment of up to $250.

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Five Questions for Trinity Washington’s Outspoken President and Trump Critic

Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed

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When Donald Trump was first elected president in 2016, Trinity Washington University president Patricia McGuire didn’t hold back how she felt about his policies. She let him have it—publicly, sharply, and often.

 

Now the country is headed into a second Trump presidency at a time when many education advocates and students are experiencing a great deal of anger, grief, shock, fear, and feelings of hopelessness over what the future may hold. In this interview, McGuire shares how she plans to approach Trump’s second term and how she thinks higher education leaders should respond to what’s bound to be an eventful four years for the sector.

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What Trump’s Threats of Mass Deportation Could Mean for Higher Ed

Karin Fischer, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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President-elect Donald J. Trump’s anti-immigrant stances and pledges of mass deportation are heightening uncertainty and anxiety among undocumented, international, and first-generation immigrant students and their advocates, as his America First policies again have the potential to affect college campuses.

 

Still, immigration experts and advocates caution against overreacting to the election outcome. “This is really a time for preparation and not panic,” says Miriam Feldblum, executive director of the Presidents’ Alliance on Higher Education and Immigration.

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Is Loneliness as Bad for Students as Smoking?

Jack Stripling, College Matters

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On paper, the residential college experience looks like a laboratory custom built to facilitate human connection. Students bunking together in dorms, eating together in dining halls, throwing Frisbees on the quad. So it might sound baffling that so many college students today say they feel isolated on their campuses.

 

Public health officials are sounding an alarm about this issue, and colleges are responding with a flurry of programs and interventions. But here’s the thing: Loneliness is part of the human condition. It’s something everyone can expect to feel in life. How much, then, should colleges be talking about it? Is there a risk of telling students that loneliness is a problem that needs to be solved?

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Telling the Full Community College Story

Matthew Dembicki, Community College Daily

Three Counties That Tell the Story of America’s Education Divide

Scott Smallwood and Sara Hebel, The Dispatch

AI Skills Could Eclipse College Degrees

Laura Ascione, eCampus News

An Interview With Western Governors University’s Scott Pulsipher

Greg Behrman, NationSwell

West Virginia Launches Microcredentials to Open Up Paths to Jobs, Careers

Nadia Ramlagan, Public News Service

RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY

CUNY’s Stand for Race and Ethnic Studies in Challenging Times

Marybeth Gasman, Forbes

Is Banning DEI in College Courses the Next Step for Texas?

Marcela Rodrigues, The Dallas Morning News

Trump Gears Up for Assault on Wokeness With Education Overhaul

Matt Barnum and Douglas Belkin, The Wall Street Journal

At Greensboro’s HBCUs, Persistence in the Face of Defeat

P.R. Lockhart, The Assembly

Opinion: Understanding Academic Exile After the 2024 Election

Kyle J. Williams, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

Blog: Racism Is Such a Touchy Topic That Many US Educators Avoid it—We Are College Professors Who Tackled That Challenge Head On

Adam Seagrave and Stephanie Shonekan, The Conversation

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Report: Creating a Road Map to Dual-Enrollment Offerings

Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed

Oklahoma Bucking National Trend as More Freshmen Enroll in Public Colleges, Universities

Murray Evans, The Oklahoman

Charter School Using Grant to Aim Beyond College Enrollment

Arika Herron, Axios

State Universities Facing Issues as They Seek to Maintain Enrollment

Dar Danielson, Radio Iowa

Opinion: A Theory on Declining University Enrollment—and Why That's a Bad Thing

Sanaullah Khan, Akron Beacon Journal

AFFORDABILITY

Opening Doors: To Provide More Educational and Career Opportunities to Underserved Populations, Central Mass. Colleges Are Enhancing Financial Aid

Mica Kanner-Mascolo, Worcester Business Journal 

Opinion: How One Pennsylvania College Navigated the Turbulent FAFSA Season

Joseph Howard, Higher Ed Dive

Commentary: How Public Universities Are Magnifying Their Public Impact

Mark Becker, Orlando Sentinel

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Webinar: Cracking the Retention Code: How Data and AI Are Helping Shape Student Success

Inside Higher Ed

Webinar: The Next-Gen Campus: Preparing for the New Wave of Tech Integrations

University Business

Miles to Go: The State of Education for Black Students in America

Southern Education Foundation

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Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

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