Top Higher Education News for Tuesday
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September 9, 2025

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Accreditors’ New Frontier

Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed

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The microcredential landscape is often called a “wild west” in higher ed circles. The field is crowded with tens of thousands of program providers, in and outside of academia, online and in person. Short-term programs vary widely, from certificates to badges to boot camps, spanning weeks to months to over a year. And while some programs offer high returns, others yield little to none or insufficiently track outcomes.

 

Now, two accrediting agencies are stepping into that murky terrain, hoping to bring some order—and branch out into a new market.

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Even as Classes Begin, Some Foreign Students Are Still in Visa Limbo

Karin Fischer, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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College campuses are definitely not operating as normal these days. A global backlog of student visas has led to a decline in international enrollments this fall. The question is, by how much?

 

Days, and even weeks, after classes have begun, many foreign students are still struggling to get visa appointments, holding out hope of salvaging the semester. Meanwhile, institutions are simultaneously striving to reassure those stranded in their home countries that their American educational dream remains intact, albeit postponed. They are offering online courses and activities to keep students engaged and on track to enroll when bottlenecks ease.

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Closing the Attainment Gap With Credit for Prior Learning

Ashley Mowreader, Voices of Student Success

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Approximately 65 percent of the 1.2 million active-duty service members in the U.S. armed forces have less than an associate degree level of education, according to 2023 data; many of them hold some college credits but no degree. Federal aid programs make enrolling in college and earning a degree more accessible for military-affiliated students, but not every student is aware of academic interventions that can help them complete a credential sooner, including Credit for Prior Learning, or CPL.

 

In this interview, three experts from the Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education discuss efforts to expand CPL opportunities among military-affiliated students and adult learners more broadly.

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Student Support Services Funding Is on the Line as Congress Crafts the Budget

Hannah Habermann, Wyoming Public Radio

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Like many colleges and universities across the country, the University of Wyoming, Sheridan College, Northwest College in Powell, and Central Wyoming College in Riverton all receive TRIO Student Support Services funding to help low-income, first-generation, and disabled students navigate the twists and turns of college. Many of these students are working part-time and juggling their pursuit of getting a degree with the demands of a family and a job.

 

Now, with TRIO being one of many programs up for debate as Congress hashes out the federal budget this fall, the future education plans of countless students could be in jeopardy.

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‘We’re Terrified’: University Faculty in the South Describe Culture of Fear on Campus in New Survey

Piper Hutchinson, Louisiana Illuminator

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A survey of higher education faculty in the South found that professors are most worried about political influence, with many considering employment elsewhere. According to the same study conducted last year, salary ranked as faculty members' primary motivation for quitting.

 

In August, the American Association of University Professors conducted a survey among approximately 4,000 faculty members. Respondents are members of the association's chapters in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas. About 200 were from Louisiana. 

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Sen. Brandon Creighton’s Switch From Lawmaking to Texas Tech Leader Signals a New Era for Higher Ed

Jessica Priest, The Texas Tribune

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As the second overtime legislative session of the year drew to a close, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, the influential leader of the Texas Senate, took some time to bid farewell to his colleague, Sen. Brandon Creighton.

 

The architect of a recent bevy of laws reshaping higher education in Texas—from the ban on diversity, equity, and inclusion programs to limits on protests and faculty’s influence on campuses—is stepping down to take a new job overseeing those very changes at Texas Tech University.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

New Report Says Skills and Degrees Must Coexist

Marybeth Gasman, Forbes

Apprenticeships Aimed at Boosting Child Care Careers Have Been Flourishing

Alina Tugend, The 74

Leading the Eco-Charge

Douglas Guth, Community College Daily

Commentary: California Faces a Nursing Shortage. Community Colleges Can Help

Betty Limon, CalMatters

COLLEGE AFFORDABILITY

Oregon Borrowers Face Confusion, Anxiety as Federal Changes Disrupt Student Loan Repayment Options

Tiffany Camhi, Oregon Public Broadcasting

Paying for College: Students and Experts Share Realistic Strategies to Afford Higher Education

Jane Caffrey, ABC15 Arizona

Students Without Legal Status Are Dropping Out or Delaying College as States Revoke Tuition Breaks

Kate Payne, The Associated Press

Commentary: Hancock’s Role When College Gets Costlier

Kevin Walthers, Santa Ynez Valley News

STUDENT SUPPORT

Helping Student Parents Overcome Financial Fragility

Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed

Adding More Green Space to a Campus Is a Simple, Cheap, and Healthy Way to Help Millions of Stressed and Depressed College Students

Chanam Lee, Li Deng, and Yizhen Ding, The Conversation

Bay College’s New Bus Route Looks to Help Students Get Groceries

Tristen Kendrick, WLUC

DMACC Joins Network of Universities Collaborating for First-Gen Student Support

Brooklyn Draisey, Iowa Capital Dispatch

COLLEGE ACCESS

San Antonio’s College Leaders Say They’re Collaborating, Not Competing: ‘We All Stand for More Access’

Danya Pérez, San Antonio Report

Opinion: Why Indiana University Southeast and Regional Universities Matter Now More Than Ever

Aubrey Woods, Seymour Tribune

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Supporting Young Parents in Higher Education

The Annie E. Casey Foundation

To Prepare Young People for the AI Workplace, Focus on the Fundamentals

Brookings Institution

How Technology Can Transform the Higher Education Accreditation Process and Drive Continuous Improvement at Colleges and Universities

American Enterprise Institute

Webinar: Increasing Access to Internships

The Chronicle of Higher Education

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Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

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