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.

September 12, 2025

Subscribe to this email

TOP STORIES

download - 2025-09-10T184315.297

A Mother’s Many Roads

Eric Hoover, The Chronicle of Higher Education

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

More than one-fifth of all undergraduates are parents, and, like many of them, Bridgette Ellis lives on a tight budget, with limited means to cover costly emergencies. She supports her family without receiving child support from their father. She has a part-time job and a handful of grants and scholarships that help cover the family’s living expenses. But she didn’t see how she could afford a down payment on a decent used car—something she desperately needed to attend community college.

 

These challenges are a daily part of life for Ellis and countless student-parents who are trying to create better futures for themselves and their children through higher education.

download - 2025-09-10T185034.074

Immigrant Families Struggle to Pay Tuition After Texas Dream Act Is Repealed

Greta Díaz González Vázquez, KUT

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Approximately 57,000 students without legal status have returned to Texas university classrooms, but they now must pay tuition rates for foreign students due to a June court ruling that halted the in-state tuition law.

 

One student’s family had to take out a $15,000 loan in order for their daughter to stay enrolled at the University of Texas, where she hopes to graduate in December. Others are not so fortunate. Advocates contend that many students brought to the United States as children have no choice but to give up their college dreams.

download - 2025-09-10T073333.277

After One Year at the Helm, Harrison Keller Has Overhauled UNT’s Budget and Led Through Turbulent Changes

Lucinda Breeding-Gonzales, Denton Record-Chronicle

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

In his first academic year, University of North Texas president Harrison Keller overhauled the school's budgeting process and strategy and surveyed students' needs and struggles. He's also steered the school through a period of political turmoil—on both the national and state levels—that has targeted higher education, as well as confirmed legislative interest in funding university programs that will ultimately fuel economic innovation and growth.

 

In this interview, Keller discusses his first year at UNT, threats to Hispanic-Serving Institutions, declines in enrollment from international students, and why he's turning to artificial intelligence to get a clearer picture of the kinds of supports that today's learners need to thrive.

download - 2025-09-10T185536.179

How Many Undocumented Students Are Enrolled at U.S. Colleges?

Danielle McLean, Higher Ed Dive

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

More than 500,000 undocumented students enrolled in higher education in the United States in 2023, according to a new report from the Presidents’ Alliance on Higher Education and Immigration and the American Immigration Council.

 

These individuals pursue a range of programs and often seek advanced degrees—allowing them to advance scientific innovation, become business leaders, and improve the campus community. Now, however, new policies under the Trump administration could hinder their enrollment.

download - 2025-09-10T190903.415

Harvard Is Back to School for a Year That Will Be a Test Case in Free Speech, Students and Staff Say

Kimmy Yam, NBC News

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

It was the first week of school at Harvard University, and students could be found at a usual spot in front of the library taking carefree selfies. Upperclassmen fell back into the familiarity of old friends, while freshmen from abroad, many stepping on campus for the first time as students, are asking orientation advisors what to do if they encounter immigration agents.

 

Amid the crisp air distinctive to the beginning of the school year, there is a sense of both routine and anxiety. This year will be a further test case in free speech, students and staff members say. And there’s no telling how their Harvard experience will be shaped by an increasingly polarizing political environment.

istockphoto-2208901226-612x612

Can StoryCorps Heal the Divide on Campus?

Sara Custer, The Key

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

For more than 20 years, StoryCorps has been documenting conversations between Americans and broadcasting them on public radio. In 2017, StoryCorps launched One Small Step, a new project that pairs strangers on opposing sides of the political divide for one-on-one conversations. The organization is now bringing its initiative to college campuses.

 

Dave Isay, the founder of StoryCorps, explains more about the power of conversation and how seeing the common humanity in everyone can help foster understanding and belonging among students.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

AI Goes to College: How New Tech Is Driving Majors and Jobs

Laurent Belsie, Ira Porter, Hannah Goeke, and Goodluck Ajeh, The Christian Science Monitor

Two Initiatives, One Mission: Reshaping Workforce Development

Alison Griffin, Forbes

If You're Worried About AI Taking Your Job, These Careers Are the Safest Bets, an AI Politics Professor Says

Thibault Spirlet, Business Insider

Opinion: Idaho’s CTE Success: Preparing Students for the Jobs Our Economy Needs

Paula Kellerer, Idaho Education News

EQUITY IN EDUCATION

Education Department Moves to End Funding for Minority-Serving Institutions

Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed

In a Trump Era, Black Students Flock to HBCUs, ‘Where Their History Isn’t Being Erased’, Says Spelman College President

David Smith, The Guardian

At Emory University, the Disbanding of DEI Contradicts the School's Progressive Reputation

Curtis Bunn, NBC News

Opinion: Why Dismantling Hispanic Serving Institutions Is a Direct Attack on America’s Workforce

Mordecai Ian Brownlee, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

The International-Enrollment Picture Comes Into Focus

Karin Fischer, Latitudes

Fresno Unified Expands Dual Enrollment Opportunities to Include Second HBCU

Jessica Harrington, KFSN

What to Know About Enrollment Growth, Research Goals at Texas A&M-Corpus Christi

Olivia Garrett, Corpus Christi Caller Times

Stateline Colleges See Higher Enrollment Despite National Decline

Alyssa Kelly, WIFR

EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT

California Adults Without Degrees Still See Value in Higher Education Despite Barriers

Jamal Watson, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

Income Gap Between Householders With College Degrees and Those With High School Degrees But No College Widened Over Last Two Decades

Zach Scherer and Michael D. King, U.S. Census Bureau

Report: 16% of CA Community College Students Finish 4-Year Degree

Suzanne Potter, Public News Service

Educational Attainment in the US

Kent Phillippe, DataPoints

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Webinar: The State of Online Higher Education in 2025

Center for American Progress

Corps to Careers: Expanding Career Opportunities for Young Adults Involved in Service and Conservation Programs

Brookings Institution

Education at a Glance 2025

OECD

Webinar: Lessons on Collecting Data and Driving Change to Support Student Parent Success

Urban Institute

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

Facebook
Instagram
LinkedIn