Top Higher Education News for Thursday
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 21, 2024

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TOP STORIES

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Postelection Uncertainty Looms Large for Presidents

Josh Moody, Inside Higher Ed

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With Donald Trump set to re-enter the White House in two months, many higher education professionals have more questions than answers about what his education priorities will be. Their uncertainty was on full display recently when a group of college presidents gathered for an annual media convening hosted by Arizona State University's Michael Crow.

 

During the event, nearly a dozen higher education leaders fielded questions on a wide range of topics, but none dominated the discussion more than Trump.

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State Initiative Helps Oregon Inmates Forge New Career Pathways

Tiffany Camhi, Oregon Public Broadcasting

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Five months ago, Desmond Hoy was incarcerated at Deer Ridge Correctional Institution in Madras, where he served more than three years for charges related to a car theft. During that time, he earned his General Equivalency Diploma, became a tutor at the facility’s education center, and learned a new trade: welding.

 

Hoy's perseverance and determination would ultimately help him establish a fulfilling career. He credits WorkSource Oregon Reentry, a new employment program that Deer Ridge piloted, for boosting his confidence and assisting him in achieving his goals both inside and outside of prison. 

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Want to Find Highly Engaged Students at Four-Year Colleges? Look at Transfer Students.

Jeffrey R. Young, EdSurge

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Like millions of students who return to college as adults, Tim Lum got a two-year degree at his local community college. And this year, at the age of 36, he's one of 13 percent of the nation's college students who transfer to four-year institutions.

 

Lum arrived at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa excited to be there and eager to dive into class assignments, join student clubs, and get involved. He's not alone—research shows that transfer students often tend to be more motivated and engaged than students who come to college straight from high school.

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How Trump Might Target DACA Recipients and Other Immigrant Groups

The AZ Mirror

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President-elect Donald Trump has promised to carry out a range of immigration actions, including mass deportations, with the help of the National Guard or military. Many of Trump’s plans do not require congressional approval, but they still might be challenging to undertake at the scale that Trump has described.

 

In this interview, Amy Lieberman, a politics editor at The Conversation U.S., asks University of Southern California immigration law scholar Jean Lantz Reisz to explain how Trump could follow through on some of his immigration promises during his second administration—and what legal and political obstacles he may encounter along the way.

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Latest Data on Community Colleges From Richmond Fed

Matthew Dembicki, Community College Daily

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Based on traditional federal data—specifically, from the U.S. Department of Education's Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System—the “student success” rate at Tri-County Technical College in South Carolina doesn’t look so great.

 

But when a new metric designed by the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond is applied, the rate rockets up. That reality sheds light on how much work that community colleges do to help their students isn’t collected in IPEDS, which is typically the go-to data on higher education.

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WGU President Scott Pulsipher on Bridging the Credentials Gap Through Competency-Based Education

Ben Wildavsky, The Higher Ed Spotlight Podcast

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Western Governors University is known for tackling today's talent shortage with its innovative competency-based education model that allows students to earn college degrees for skills they've already mastered.

 

On this podcast, WGU's Scott Pulsipher explains more about his school's efforts to make higher education accessible to everyone, plus how WGU's latest acquisition of Craft Education will help scale work-based learning to better meet workforce needs.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

LER Accelerator Inventory Yields Important Early Lessons

Holly Zanville, The EvoLLLution

Survey of Parents of High Schoolers Reveals Perceptions of Higher Education

Detroit Regional Chamber

Utah College Presidents Should Quickly Start Cutting ‘Inefficient’ Programs, State Auditors Say

Courtney Tanner, The Salt Lake Tribune

Notes From a White House Summit on Classrooms to Careers

Scott Carlson, The Edge

Editorial: Shifting Focus From Degrees to Careers

The Press Democrat

Commentary: Educators in Uncertain Times: Fostering Resilience and Empathy in Our Classrooms

Beth Slazak, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY

DEI Retrenchment on Campus Is Far Worse Than Maps Show

Shaun Harper, Resident Scholar Blog

Despite DEI Pushback, New Report Shows Companies Stay Committed to DEI

Julie Kratz, Forbes

Gov. Kevin Stitt Questions Whether OU Is Breaking State Law on Teaching DEI

Alyse Jones, KOCO

UT Austin Flagging DEI-Related Words in ‘Routine Scans’ of Its Website

Jala Washington, KXAN

Views: How Colleges Can Pivot to Keep DEI Alive

Melissa Segal, Inside Higher Ed

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Enrollment Rebound at Oregon’s Public Colleges and Universities Continues for Second Consecutive Year

Tiffany Camhi, Oregon Public Broadcasting

Fall 2024 Enrollment Trends in Three Charts

Laura Spitalniak, Higher Ed Dive

Here's Why Experts Say It's Easier Than Ever to Get Into Your Dream College

Audra Phillips, WCNC

Opinion: How to View the 'Enrollment Cliff' Facing Colleges and Universities

Neville Pinto, The Cincinnati Enquirer

Here Are Several Examples of Strong Dual Enrollment Partnerships

Alcino Donadel, University Business

Foreign Enrollments at U.S. Colleges Hit a New High. It’s Not Due to an Influx of New Students.

Karin Fischer, Latitudes

AFFORDABILITY

'Bursting at the Seams’: Free Community College Straining Resources

Juliet Schulman-Hall, MassLive

Cuts to Indiana Financial Aid Could Impact Tens of Thousands of Students

Johanna Alonso, Inside Higher Ed

Texas Woman's University Scraps Plans to Increase Tuition After Governor Orders Tuition Freeze

Rachel Behrndt, WFAA

Virginia's In-State Tuition and Fees Among Nation's Highest

Sabrina Moreno, Axios

Commentary: Despite Challenges, Long-Run FAFSA Trends Show Promise

Peter Granville and Bill DeBaun, The Century Foundation

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

How Do College Graduates’ Earnings Change Over Time?

Urban Institute

The LER Accelerator Inventory 2024

Learn & Work Ecosystem Library

Views of DEI Have Become Slightly More Negative Among U.S. Workers

The Pew Research Center

Understanding the Full Cost of Short-Term Credentials

The Education Trust

Virtual Forum: The Student-Success Journey: Making the Final Steps Toward Graduation

The Chronicle of Higher Education

The Future of the U.S. Digital Economy Depends on Equitable Access to Its Jobs

Brookings Institution

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

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