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 25, 2024

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A Guaranteed Income Program for Community College Students

Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed

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Brenda Olazava, 39, didn’t know if she’d be able to stay enrolled at Los Angeles City College this semester. She found out she was no longer going to receive a cash benefit from the county for low-income families, which helped pay her rent while she studied for her associate degree in psychology and sociology and worked part-time at the front desk of the college’s counseling department.

 

Then she got an email from the Los Angeles Community College District inviting her to apply for a new form of aid, a guaranteed basic income program called Building Outstanding Opportunities for Students to Thrive, or BOOST.

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The FAFSA Is Live, Tested, and ‘Already Working’

Eric Hoover, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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Students, families, financial aid counselors, and others are optimistic: The Free Application for Federal Student Aid is now accessible to all users and operating efficiently.

 

Last week's announcement by officials at the U.S. Department of Education marks a pivotal moment in the continuing FAFSA saga. Throughout the 2024-25 cycle, technical errors and processing delays stymied students, parents, and college officials, injecting months of chaos into the enrollment process. Now, everyone with a stake in the federal-aid system is hoping to avoid a sequel.

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Trump Nominee for Education Secretary Would Come Backed With Detailed Policy Agenda

Louis Freedberg, EdSource

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President-elect Donald Trump’s selection of a close ally and the co-chair of his transition team indicates that education could be a major priority of his administration, even though it did not feature prominently in the 2024 presidential campaign.

 

Linda McMahon, the former CEO of World Wrestling Entertainment, is a leading financial backer Trump has been close to for decades. She's also chair of the board of the little-known America First Policy Institute. The institute has issued a detailed education policy agenda that is likely to serve as a guide for McMahon, and the Trump administration in general, should she be confirmed by the U.S. Senate.

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What Happens If the Education Department Is Dissolved?

Sarah Wood and Cole Claybourn, U.S. News & World Report

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The U.S. Department of Education has been under heightened scrutiny over the past few years, with the rocky rollout of the simplified version of the Free Application for Federal Student Aid and the legal battle for student loan forgiveness under the Biden administration.

 

It’s once again on the chopping block as former President Donald Trump has proposed dissolving the agency when he enters the White House for a second term. Here’s what eliminating the Education Department might mean for K-12 and higher education.

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What Does 'Youth Apprenticeship' Mean? The Answer, According to Each State

Lancy Downs, New America

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The term “youth apprenticeship” seems relatively straightforward, but trying to understand exactly what it means can often feel like a dizzying exercise in semantics. Does it refer to youth in Registered Apprenticeship? Pre-apprenticeship? Non-registered apprenticeships designed for high school students?

 

The answer, in some ways, is all of the above. That’s because, in the United States, there is no federal legal definition of “youth apprenticeship.” In the absence of that definition, states are stepping in to create their own, and, without federal standards to shape them, these definitions often look quite different from one another.

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In the Race to Attract Students, Historically Black Colleges Sprint Out Front

Ira Porter, The Christian Science Monitor

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U.S. colleges and universities have faced a number of challenges in recent years, including the new issue-ridden Free Application for Federal Student Aid and the 2023 decision by the U.S. Supreme Court to ban affirmative action on campuses.

 

And then there's freshman enrollment, which declined at colleges for the first time since 2020, with a five percent drop in first-year students. But the number of applicants and first-year students at Historically Black Colleges and Universities offers a different picture. Many HBCUs, in fact, have reason to revel, with some seeing record increases. What’s behind their success?

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Progress in a Time of Disruption: The Urgency of Reimagining Higher Ed

Jamie Merisotis, Lumina Foundation

Building a Roadmap to Tech Careers for Veterans and Military Spouses

Laura Aka, WorkingNation

How the American Talent Initiative Is Using Communities of Practice to Advance Student Success in Higher Education

Carmen L. Araoz, Ithaka S+R

Commentary: How Community Colleges Can Realize the Full Potential of Apprenticeships

Anne M. Kress, Community College Daily

Blog: Winds of Change in Higher Ed to Become a Hurricane in 2025

Ray Schroeder, Online: Trending Now

STUDENT SUPPORTS

Survey: Supporting Students Postelection, in Four Charts

Colleen Flaherty, Inside Higher Ed

Supporting Student Success Beyond Academics

Tabitha Whissemore, Community College Daily

Parents in Virginia Community College Program Juggle Coursework, Expenses

Megan Pauly, VPM News

Paul Quinn College to Create an Innovative Housing Model and a Mixed-Use Community

Diverse Issues in Higher Education

Commentary: How Higher Ed Can Benefit From the Family Navigator Model

Steven M. Baule, eCampus News

AFFORDABILITY

Connecticut $20K Student Loan Reimbursement Program Will Launch in 2025

Desirae Sin, The CT Mirror

Leading Universities Introduce a Flurry of Free Tuition Offers

Michael T. Nietzel, Forbes

A Tuition Freeze Without More State Aid Could Leave Texas Universities Strapped

Kate McGee and Shomial Ahmad, The Texas Tribune

Lansing Promise Scholarship Program Expanding Funds, Eligibility

Maya Moore and Sophia Saliby, WKAR

RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY

Several Idaho Universities Dissolve DEI Units, Students and Experts React

Aspen Shumpert, Audrielle Tackett, Brian Holmes, and Richard Rodriguez, KTVB

Northeastern University Sidesteps California’s New Legacy Admissions Ban

Kirk Carapezza, GBH News

Economists Studied Racial Discrimination in LinkedIn Job Networking. Here’s What They Found.

Clark Merrefield, The Journalist's Resource

IHL Deletes the Word ‘Diversity’ From Its Policies

Molly Minta, Mississippi Today

Conservative Professors and Students Are Suing California’s Community Colleges, and Winning

Adam Echelman, CalMatters

Commentary: The Key to Fighting College 'Elitism'

Elaine Maimon, The Philadelphia Citizen

NEW PODCASTS

What Americans Really Think of Higher Ed: Insights From New America’s Varying Degrees 2024

Changing Higher Ed

Redefining Education for a Lifetime of Learning

Illumination by Modern Campus

What's Next for Addressing the Unspoken Truths in Higher Education?

Enrollify

The Power of Accessibility

The EdUP Experience

Financial Sustainability, Cold Spots, Student Housing

The Wonkhe Show

Why California Is Changing the Way Community College Students Approach Calculus

Education Beat

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Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

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