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 17, 2025

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More Colleges Promise Graduates Employment, Grad School Placement

Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed

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For some students, enrolling in college can feel like a gamble due to the high cost and lack of a clear career at the end of the program. But more colleges and universities are guaranteeing students will land a job or graduate program slot within months of graduation.

 

The trend indicates a growing awareness among higher education institutions of their responsibility to provide students with career-development opportunities, as well as their recognition that a lack of institutional support can impact a college’s perceived value.

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US Faces Shortfall of 5.3M College-Educated Workers by 2032

Laura Spitalniak, Higher Ed Dive

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The United States will need more than five million additional workers who have at least some postsecondary education by 2032, according to a new report from the Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce. Of that total, 4.5 million will need at least a bachelor’s degree. Degree-requiring positions facing “critical skills shortages” include nurses, teachers, and engineers, the report notes.

 

Without intervention, the shortfall in skilled labor would be spurred by retirements outpacing similarly qualified workers entering the labor force and the creation of almost 700,000 new jobs requiring postsecondary education.

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AI Is Killing the College Essay. Enter the 'Video Essay'

Anne Kim, Washington Monthly

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The onslaught of artificial intelligence into higher education has been especially worrisome for college admissions officers: Are the students they admit chatbots in disguise? According to one 2024 survey, as many as one in three high school seniors applying to college in the 2023-24 school year used AI for their essays.

 

In response, some colleges are inviting applicants to submit a “video introduction” of themselves. Proponents argue that video submissions are a cheat-proof antidote to the rising scourge of AI-written essays. Others, however, say video college applications may give wealthy applicants another leg up over less-affluent peers, especially when videos are slickly produced and the applicants well-scripted.

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Charlie Kirk’s Killing Threatens Colleges’ Ability to Fulfill an Age-Old Responsibility: Hosting Political Events

Kate Hidalgo Bellows, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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The slaying of Charlie Kirk, founder of the conservative organization Turning Point USA, on the public campus of Utah Valley University, raises questions about colleges’ ability—and willingness—to host divisive figures at a time of heightened political violence.

 

If colleges, entrusted with fostering the free exchange of ideas, can’t feature controversial speakers because of safety fears, are they taking a necessary measure or failing to meet their mission?

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Fort Lewis College Nursing Students Want to Improve Rural Health Care

Jason Gonzales, Chalkbeat Colorado

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Ryan Jim wants to become a nurse because he understands health care challenges in rural, Native communities. Growing up, the 20-year-old Fort Lewis College student would help take care of grandparents and regularly drive them to doctor appointments near his home in Fort Defiance, Arizona, on the Navajo Nation reservation.

 

This semester, Jim began his journey to care for his community as one of 22 Fort Lewis students in the inaugural cohort in the Durango school’s new bachelor’s degree nursing program. The effort is the only bachelor’s degree-level nursing program in the region, and fulfills a vital need to combat a nationwide nursing shortage that’s more pronounced in rural areas.

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Colleges Must Embed Career Purpose Throughout Student Journey, New Report Urges

Jamal Watson, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

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Higher education faces a critical challenge: too many students are spending too much time and money on degrees that don’t align with their career aspirations or earning potential.

 

A new report from Complete College America offers insight into solutions by reimagining how institutions can embed career readiness and purpose-driven guidance throughout the entire student journey—from enrollment to alumni engagement.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Adult Learners Need More Than Tweaks, and Here’s How Some Colleges Are Stepping Up

Wendy Sedlak, Lumina Foundation

Can Higher Education Lead in Workforce Transformation?

James DeVaney and Suzanne Dove, Learning Innovation

Gauging the Impending Skills Shortage

Tabitha Whissemore, Community College Daily

Over Half of US Healthcare Workers Plan to Switch Jobs by Next Year, Survey Finds

Mrinalika Roy, Reuters

EQUITY IN EDUCATION

The Case for Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs): Opportunity Meeting Talent

Deborah A. Santiago, Medium

Latino Workers Drive California’s Economy But Face Deep Inequities

Cathie Anderson, The Sacramento Bee

The Fall of Affirmative Action Still Fuels Debates Over Race and Education. Here’s Why.

Kalyn Belsha, Chalkbeat

Opinion: Are We Prepared to Protect and Advocate for Undocumented Students?

Juanita Hinojosa and Federick J. Ngo, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

COLLEGE AFFORDABILITY

More California High School Seniors Applied for College Financial Aid This Year Than Last

Mikhail Zinshteyn, CalMatters

How Does the Big Beautiful Bill Impact Savings Accounts for Postsecondary Education?

Patrick Hain and Kayla Anthony, National League of Cities

Room and Board Are Making College Less Affordable

Kevin Cook, Rachel Yang Zhou, and Selina Gomez, Public Policy Institute of California

Columbus State, Ohio State Partner to Offer Tuition-Free Bachelor's Degree Completion

Allie Vugrincic, WOSU

FEDERAL POLICY

The Federal Freeze of $660 Million in TRIO Funding Dashes Millions of Students’ College Dreams

Mandla Deskins, The Education Trust

Survey: Most College Presidents Worried About New Federal Policies

Kathryn Palmer, Inside Higher Ed

San Antonio Colleges Just Lost a Key Source of Funding: Grants for Hispanic-Serving Institutions

Camille Phillips, Texas Public Radio

Wisconsin Colleges Vow to Keep Supporting Hispanic Students Despite Federal Funding Cuts

Natalie Yahr, Wisconsin Watch

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Falling Behind: How Skills Shortages Threaten Future Jobs

Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce

Webinar: Centering Mental Health for Students in Higher Education

The Steve Fund

Should States Reduce Teacher Licensing Requirements? Evidence From the Rise of For-Profit Training Programs in Texas

National Bureau of Economic Research

Webinar: Congress Funded Equity and Access. The Trump Administration Calls It Discrimination

dotEDU

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

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