Top Higher Education News for Friday
Lumina

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.

October 10, 2025

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Advancing Career-Connected High-Impact Practices

Lumina Foundation

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Career-Connected High-Impact Practices (HIPs) are powerful learning experiences that help students graduate on time, learn deeply, and land good jobs. The experiences, when done well, don’t just help students finish college—they help them bridge the gap between classroom learning and the real-world competencies employers value: problem solving, teamwork, communication, adaptability, and leadership.

 

In this video, Lumina Foundation's Jasmine Haywood and Rob Shorette explain that for HIPs to be truly effective, they must be accessible to all students, connected directly to career pathways, and designed with equity at the center.

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Transparency Now or Regulation Later

Sara Custer, Inside Higher Ed

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Doctors predicted Wayne Frederick, the president of Howard University, wouldn’t live past the age of eight. He's now 54. Frederick came to the United States from Trinidad and Tobago with a dream of finding a cure for his disease, sickle cell anemia, but detoured into higher education administration.

 

Finding cures to debilitating diseases is one of many intangible things that higher ed does to change lives. Institutions are also the largest employers in 10 states; colleges have helped regenerate many of America’s Rust Belt centers. And higher education is undeniably a public benefit. But as concerns grow about the affordability of college, do Americans care?

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Trump’s ‘Compact’ Is Freaking People Out

Jack Stripling, College Matters

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After months of skirmishes with colleges, the Trump administration has proposed a treaty of sorts with nine high-profile institutions. The proposal requires participating colleges to explicitly ban considerations of race in admissions or in the awarding of scholarships, abolish departments that “belittle” conservative views, and strictly limit the percentage of international students enrolled in undergraduate programs.

 

Described as reminiscent of a Mafia-style ultimatum, many higher education associations and analysts are blasting the deal. But what does this compact say about the federal government and higher education's historic relationship, and how is it changing?

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Rethinking College in Indiana

Carolyn Gentle-Genitty, Beyond Transfer

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Colleges across the country are not blind to the demographic challenges facing higher education. A declining birth rate, an aging workforce, admissions redesigns, and disruptive technologies such as artificial intelligence intensify the demand for mid-level, adaptable credentials to reskill workers quickly.

 

Here is where Butler University's Founder’s College shifts the ground. It builds wraparound supports—career coaching, social workers, family inclusion, and embedded apprenticeships—into the core of its structure rather than leaving them at the margins. By lowering tuition costs to nearly debt-free levels for students and building in work-integrated experiences, Founder’s College creates a system where opportunity is the design, not the exception.

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Making a Real-World Impact

Jamaal Abdul-Alim, The EDULedger

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Growing up, family trips for Armando Lizarraga involved going to visit his father in prison.

 

It wasn’t until Lizarraga got to college that he began to understand the profound impact his father’s incarceration had on his childhood and education. A pivotal moment came in 2016, when Lizarraga transferred from El Camino Community College to the University of California, Los Angeles. There, he discovered an organization called Underground Scholars, which provides support to students who are formerly incarcerated or who—like Lizarraga—have been influenced by America’s criminal justice system.

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What’s Kept Morgan State’s President at the Helm After 15 Years

Alecia Taylor, Capital B News

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At a time when Historically Black Colleges and Universities have experienced massive turnover, David K. Wilson at Morgan State University is an outlier: He has led the institution for the past 15 years.

 

Wilson's leadership style showcases a vision built on trust, innovation, and community. In this interview, he reflects on being one of the longest-serving HBCU presidents in the country, the importance of staying relevant, and why students are at the center of everything he does.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Civics Education Struggles, Even as Government and Politics Saturate Daily Life

Alina Tugend, The New York Times

Video: Utah Leaders Focus on Growth, Opportunity in Rural Communities at Statewide Summit

KUTV

Staying the Course on Reforms

Davis Jenkins, Hana Lahr, John Fink, Serena C. Klempin, and Maggie P. Fay, Community College Daily

Training the New Tech Workers Amid the Data Center Boom

Colleen Connolly, Work Shift

STUDENT SUPPORT

New Study Reveals Critical Factors in Indigenous Student Success and Belonging

Jamal Watson, The EDULedger

In a First, Students Lead Statewide Mental Health Summit

Raven Santana, NJ Spotlight News

Basic Needs, Real Costs: Collaborative Care

Cristian Ulisses Reyes, National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators

SUNY Expands Student Support to Boost On-Time Graduation

Adina Genn, Long Island Business News

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

State Report on Virginia Community Colleges Raises 'Demographic Cliff' Questions

Brad Kutner, Radio IQ

Alabama Community Colleges Continue to See Enrollment Grow

Andrea Tinker, Alabama Reflector

New Wayne State Program Aims to Remove College Barriers for DPSCD Students

Micah Walker and Kim Kozlowski, Bridge Detroit

Ohio Colleges See Drop in International Student Enrollment

Amy Morona, Signal Cleveland

STATE POLICY

Pennsylvania Lawmakers Seek to Bar State-Funded Colleges From Signing Trump Compact

Natalie Schwartz, Higher Ed Dive

Some Texas Community Colleges Remove Course Materials Amid Broader Push to Limit Gender Identity Discussions

Sneha Dey, News From the States

Thousands of Pa. College Students Wait for Key Financial Aid Due to State Budget Impasse

Charlotte Keith, Spotlight PA

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Power in Culture: A Study on Campus Climate and Sense of Belonging for Indigenous Students

National Native Scholarship Providers

Webinar: The Importance of Real Skills for the AI World

Brookings Institution

Building Pathways to Tech Careers Through edX Boot Camps

Jobs for the Future

The Shift Ahead: HBCUs, Artificial Intelligence, and a New Vision for Higher Education

Huston-Tillotson University, Ellucian, and UNCF

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

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