Top stories in higher ed for Tuesday
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| Lumina Foundation is committed to increasing the proportion of Americans with high-quality degrees, certificates and other credentials to 60 percent by 2025. |
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Focus on Fontana: Training Young People for the Skilled Trades Laura Aka, WorkingNation SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Located in California’s San Bernardino County, the city of Fontana is home to 400 manufacturers. According to Mayor Acquanetta Warren, these manufacturers are the city's unknown secret. But they need more workers to fill available jobs. Warren is committed to making that happen, reinvesting in the local community to prepare current and future workers for good-paying jobs and careers in the skilled trades. |
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What Higher Education Has Endured for the Past Year Audrey Williams June and Jacquelyn Elias, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The pandemic has imposed a considerable price on higher education—from a 22 percent decrease in high-school graduates going straight to college in the fall of 2020 to a dramatic rise in the number of students who lost a job, an internship, or an offer of either one due to COVID-19. This infographic offers a glimpse into some of COVID-19’s most notable effects so far. |
Trying Times for Tribal Colleges Elizabeth Redden, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter At Navajo Technical University, which has campuses on the sprawling Navajo reservation in New Mexico and Arizona, some students commute up to two hours each way just to attend classes. Lack of internet access, declining first-year enrollment, and increasing student withdrawals are just some of the pandemic-related issues tribal colleges face. Many students and staff have also lost family members to COVID-19. In spite of these challenges, college leaders say students continue to show great resiliency. |
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| Now’s Our Chance: The Education, Training, and Equity Changes We Must Make in This Recovery Jamie Merisotis, Lumina Foundation SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Crises have a way of revealing who we really are, and that’s as true for nations as it is for people. If we don’t fix critical education, job training, and racial equity challenges during this pandemic recovery, we’ll miss an historic opportunity. With vaccinations finally available a year after the health crisis began, we’re looking ahead to another phase—what could be a complex, winding road to economic recovery. We must seize the moment to vastly improve our coordination of education, workforce, and economic development policies, leading with equity at core of our efforts. |
Juggling Her Job and Her Children’s Education: One Woman's Pandemic Year Meg Woolhouse, GBH News SHARE: Facebook • Twitter For bus drivers, supermarket cashiers, personal care aides, and other essential workers, the pandemic has unleashed a torrent of setbacks. Half of households in the country earning below $35,000 a year reported falling behind on rent, and a quarter reported not having enough food, according to census data. That vexing situation has been inflicted on domestic workers, a large but often invisible workforce of mostly Black and Hispanic women who left their own families in the pandemic to care for others. |
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New Education Secretary Should Prioritize Implementation of Pell Grants for People in Prison Nick Turner, The Hill SHARE: Facebook • Twitter During his confirmation hearing, Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona made several promises to close equity gaps and make education more attainable for all students. One of the most immediate ways Cardona can accomplish his goals is to focus on Pell Grant eligibility for incarcerated students—and to make sure that implementation occurs as promptly as possible before the 2023 deadline, writes Nick Turner of the Vera Institute of Justice in this opinion piece. |
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