Top Higher Education News for Monday
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.

September 8, 2025

Subscribe to this email

TOP STORIES

istockphoto-1369813852-612x612

Lessons From a Year of College Admissions Redesign: Insights From a Nationwide Movement

Dakota Pawlicki and Melanie Heath, Today's Students, Tomorrow's Talent

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

A recent live recording of Lumina Foundation's Today’s Students, Tomorrow’s Talent podcast provides an in-depth look at the Great Admissions Redesign, a growing national movement aimed at simplifying college admissions and rethinking our understanding of the process.

 

As part of the conversation, three higher education insiders describe how they are reinventing college admissions to create "student-first" systems for today’s learners.

download - 2025-09-05T121811.104

Range of Reasons for Latest Job and Program Cuts

Josh Moody, Inside Higher Ed

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Multiple colleges and universities, including some ultrawealthy ones, have announced plans to cut jobs and academic programs, as well as implement other changes, due to financial challenges driven by a range of factors.

 

For some institutions, belt-tightening measures are directly tied to the economic forces battering the sector as a whole: declining enrollments, rising operating expenses, and broad economic uncertainty. Others attribute their cuts to financial pressure from the Trump administration, which has frozen federal research funding at multiple institutions. State lawmakers, too, have also forced program reductions at some public institutions.

istockphoto-2201198422-612x612

At George Mason University, Trump Has Found an Unbending Adversary

Stephanie Saul, The New York Times

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Gregory N. Washington, George Mason University’s first Black president, runs an institution that prizes diversity, equity, and inclusion. That commitment has made him a target of the Trump administration.

 

The Trump administration accuses Washington of violating the Civil Rights Act by discriminating against white academics in hiring and promotions. The administration is also demanding a personal public apology from Washington over his efforts to support diversity programs. Washington, however, refuses. His stance puts him on a short list of higher education leaders to explicitly and publicly challenge President Donald Trump.

download - 2025-09-06T194043.930

The Future of HSI Funding Is in Jeopardy. Here’s What One Institution Stands to Lose.

Sonel Cutler, The Chronicle of Higher Education

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

At Dominican University of California, a private institution with just over 1,100 students, nearly 30 percent of the student population identify as Hispanic or Latino. The university received its first Hispanic-Serving Institutions program funding in 2022—a five-year, $3-million grant to increase enrollment and improve graduation and retention rates for undergraduate Latino students. It received another $3 million grant the following year to provide services for its graduate students.

 

The school's president, Nicola Pitchford, says several of the resources offered to students are now at risk of going away. In this interview, Pitchford talks about the role that the HSI program plays at her institution and what’s at stake if it disappears.

download - 2025-09-05T123644.042

California Community Colleges Tackle Workforce Shortages Post-Wildfires

Sonya Christian and Jose A. Gomez, EdSource

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Disasters often expose needs people typically overlook—and clarify their responsibilities.

 

California’s community colleges are a part of the communities they serve, giving them a profound understanding of both the challenges and the opportunities that emerge in moments of crisis. Pasadena City College has played this role over the last 100 years, stepping up again during the recent Eaton Fire and continuing to lead in the difficult work of recovery. The college is a hub for uniting partners, aligning resources, and helping chart a path forward.

download - 2025-09-05T124659.355

PA, Bucks County Schools Launch Programs to Attract, Prepare, Retain Teachers Amid Shortage

Kai Lincke, Bucks County Courier Times

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

While students in Bucks County and Pennsylvania are returning to school, the need for more teachers to staff their classrooms persists. While it's not a novel issue, many have identified it as one of the most significant challenges facing the state.

 

In response, several Bucks County school districts and state agencies are launching programs to recruit and train for careers in education. From high school internships to teaching apprenticeships for paraprofessionals, they are investing in their people to strengthen the teaching workforce.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Indiana Business School to Enforce Grade Distribution for Skills Classes

Emma Whitford, Inside Higher Ed

Q&A With CAEL: Keynote Speaker Jessica Gibson Shares Perspectives Ahead of the 2025 Conference

Elizabeth Warner, The EvoLLLution

Tulsan Goes From Homeless to Higher Ed

Zach Boblitt, Public Radio Tulsa

Commentary: Higher Education’s Enduring Strength Is Its Willingness to Change

Ted Mitchell and Derrick Anderson, Deseret Magazine

TODAY'S STUDENT

The 'Typical' College Student Is Changing—and So Are Universities

Asia Tabb, WITF

'My Students Fulfill the Promise of Higher Education Every Day, But Their Future Is in Jeopardy'

Kristine E. Dillon, The Hechinger Report

Bringing Head Start to College

Mark Swartz, The 74

Adult Learners in Higher Education: Facts & Statistics About Older College Students

Jessica Bryant, BestColleges

COLLEGE COMPLETION

New Transfer Data Shows Little Progress for First-Time Students

Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed

New Data on College Completion Shows Room for Improvement

Hans Johnson and Marisol Cuellar Mejia, Public Policy Institute of California

Getting To & Through College: Notes From a Graduate Student Pursuing Dual Degrees

Gabriela Montell, The Education Trust

STUDENT SUPPORT

Delaware State Partners to Open HBCU Early College Prep High School in New York City

Kelly Powers, Delaware News Journal

Alabama University Closes Support Center for LGBTQ Students: ‘Going to Have an Enormous Impact’

Savannah Tryens-Fernandes, Advance Local

Opinion: KY Students Work Hard to Get to College. We're Making Sure We're Ready for Them.

Aaron Thompson, The Courier Journal

Opinion: Supporting the NYC Students in Foster Care Attending College This Fall

Regina Rivera, City Limits

NEW PODCASTS

International Student Recruiting in Higher Education—23 Touchpoints, Visa Barriers, and Retention Risks for Boards

Changing Higher Ed

From Campus to Career With an Entrepreneurial Mindset

Illumination by Modern Campus

If You're Not Teaching Students to Question AI, You're Failing Them

The EdUP Experience

No Relaxing Summer for Higher Ed

Future U

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

Facebook
Instagram
LinkedIn