Top Higher Education News for Wednesday
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 10, 2025

Subscribe to this email

TOP STORIES

download - 2025-09-09T112645.899

Texas Undocumented Students Start the Semester Without In-State Tuition

Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

When the U.S. Department of Justice sued Texas over the Texas Dream Act in June, Jose, a rising junior at the University of Houston, worried that his future was about to be derailed. In a matter of hours, Texas sided with the federal government, and a court order killed the law that granted in-state tuition to Jose and other undocumented students at the state’s public colleges and universities.

 

The move left him with a hard choice: drop out, because he could no longer afford tuition, or transfer to a private institution that could offer financial help.

istockphoto-144957810-612x612 (2)

How These Three New Presidents Are Approaching Their First Fall Semester

Alcino Donadel, University Business

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Across the United States, men and women stepped into top executive roles at colleges and universities during a summer when strategic planning encompassed everything from emerging programmatic needs to new demands from policymakers and the public.

 

In this interview, three new college presidents who represent different sectors of higher education identify some of the elements they share as leaders of one of the most demanding jobs in the country.

download - 2025-09-09T113925.864

Majority of US Colleges Earn 'F' Grades for Campus Free Speech Climate, New Rankings Show

Walter Hudson, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

A sweeping new survey of campus free speech reveals that nearly two-thirds of American colleges and universities are failing to foster environments supportive of open dialogue, with conservative students increasingly joining their liberal counterparts in opposing controversial speakers on campus.

 

The 2026 College Free Speech Rankings, released by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, awarded failing grades to 166 of the 257 institutions surveyed—a stark indicator of declining tolerance for diverse viewpoints across higher education.

download - 2025-09-09T121400.553

Rutgers’ President Kicks Off New Era at N.J. University—With a Surprising Plan to Deal With Trump

Liz Rosenberg, NJ Advance Media

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

As President Donald Trump continues to threaten to crack down on the nation’s colleges and universities, Rutgers University’s new president says he has no plans to publicly battle the Republican administration.

 

Instead, William Tate IV says he will focus on how New Jersey’s state university can maintain its standing as a major research institution amid looming federal funding cuts.

istockphoto-1406725841-612x612

Universities Targeted by Trump Have More Than Doubled Their Spending on Lobbying in the Last Year

Molly Reinmann and Annette Choi, CNN

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

President Donald Trump’s administration has taken aim at a series of elite colleges and universities during his second term, marking a key effort to exert control over higher education—and one that has required targeted schools to respond accordingly.

 

While the institutions targeted with canceled federal funding have responded with varying levels of what some see as capitulation or pushback, they have also adopted a quieter defense strategy—spending millions of dollars to hire Trump-allied lobbyists and lobbying firms in Washington.

download - 2025-09-09T123527.464

Kansas City Colleges Increasingly Rely on International Students. Trump Is Pushing Them Away

Frank Morris, KCUR

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

For college senior Mianfeng Lu, Kansas City is a welcome change of pace from his bustling native Beijing. But Lu, who’s getting a film degree at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, worries he—and other international students—will ultimately be forced to leave.

 

The Trump administration's clampdown on student visas is starving U.S. colleges and universities of some of their more lucrative and high-achieving students, just as American schools have been increasingly banking on students from overseas to compensate for slumping domestic enrollment.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Heading for a Career Readiness Crisis?

Matthew Dembicki, Community College Daily

How Ohio Universities Are Embracing Artificial Intelligence

Megan Henry, Ohio Capital Journal

Opinion: Schools Cannot Teach AI Literacy Without a Way to Measure It

Amit Sevak, The Hechinger Report

Blog: Three Questions for Coursera’s Tom Fail

Joshua Kim, Learning Innovation

COLLEGE AFFORDABILITY

Supporting Student-Parents at Two-Year Colleges: Addressing the Affordability Gap

Jinann Bitar and Sabreyna Reese, The Education Trust

Student Loan Changes Make Paying for College Both Easier and More Complex

Royce Podeszwa, Wisconsin Public Radio

Parents Worried About Paying for Higher Education

Tracy Davidson, NBC10

The FAFSA Officially Opens on Oct. 1—But You Can Apply for Aid Now

Kamaron McNair, CNBC

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Michigan May Lose Millions as Universities See Drop in International Students

Kim Kozlowski, Bridge Michigan

Hundreds of U.S. Colleges Poised to Close in Next Decade, Expert Says

Elizabeth Rembert and Amanda Albright, Bloomberg

Trump Administration’s Actions Impact High School Seniors’ College Planning

EdSource

Opinion: Colleges Love This Unfair Admissions Process. Eliminate It.

Maya Prakash, The Washington Post

FEDERAL POLICY

Trump Administration Takes Next Step in Dismantling ED

Jessica Blake, Inside Higher Ed

Local College Heads Join Effort to Keep Fed Ed Money in Support of Hispanic and Latino Students

WHAV

Fact or Fiction? Common Misperceptions about Federal Higher Education Data Collections

Kelly Leon and Erin Dunlop Velez, Institute for Higher Education Policy

Amid Student Fear and Uncertainty, Arizona Colleges Split on Clear Policies for ICE on Campus

Molly Bohannon, Tucson Sentinel

STATE POLICY

Professors Want to Leave Texas Because of Tense Political Climate, Survey Says

Nicholas Gutteridge, The Texas Tribune

Indiana Slashes Teacher Education Degrees amid a National Educator Shortage

Aashna Miharia, Nonprofit Quarterly

Opinion: Nontraditional Students Can Transform the ‘Demographic Cliff’ Into Economic Advantage

Eric Dahlin, Deseret News

Opinion: Iowa Needs to Invest in Its Workforce to Grow Its Economy

Brian Meyer, The Gazette

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

Facebook
Instagram
LinkedIn