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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More Progress Urgently Needed as Colleges Work to Reduce Student Stress Courtney Brown, Lumina Foundation SHARE: Facebook • Twitter College leaders across the country recognize that students are struggling with severe emotional stress, anxiety, and depression. They also know that the costs of ending formal education at high school can last a lifetime. And they’re doing something about it. There’s no simple answer to the escalating mental health crisis happening on college campuses today, but this is the perfect time to build on the momentum from some of pioneering work taking place. |
‘The Reckoning Is Here’: More Than a Third of Community College Students Have Vanished Jon Marcus, The Hechinger Report/Associated Press SHARE: Facebook • Twitter With scant advising, many community college students spend time and money on courses that won’t transfer or that they don’t need. Though most learners intend to move on to get bachelor’s degrees, only a small fraction succeed. Now, these failures are coming home to roost. Seven newsrooms are joining together to explore the crisis facing community colleges, and ways to solve it, in a series called Saving the College Dream. |
Learn About Generation Hope Sophia Fox-Sowell, 1 in 5 SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Nicole Lynn Lewis is an accomplished author, CEO of Generation Hope, and mother of five. But she didn’t always feel a sense of stability and pride. When Lewis arrived on campus with her young daughter, she didn’t know where to turn for help. Her feelings of isolation, financial stress, and a lack of community later inspired Lewis to support the mental health journeys of student-parents. |
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| Photo: Pedro Portal/Miami HeraldPolitical Polarization Is Sorting Colleges Into Red and Blue Schools Nick Anderson, The Washington Post SHARE: Facebook • Twitter With competing visions on everything from SAT and ACT scores to diversity and equity programs, California and Florida spotlight an emerging red-blue divide in higher education: The culture wars are breaking public universities into polarized camps. At stake is who goes to college, whether those students feel welcome on campus, and who decides what gets taught there. |
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Photo: Elizabeth MillerPortland State Helps Former Inmates Transition From Prison to College Sami Edge, The Oregonian SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Kiesha Johnson nervously waited on stage in a Portland State University ballroom last month, eager to speak with dozens of people about the university’s efforts to help formerly incarcerated students. Less than two years ago, Johnson was in prison. She's now a full-time student at Portland State, where she participates and runs an effort to help formerly incarcerated students transition from prison to higher education. |
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The History and Future of Black Studies, According to One Founder, Poet Sonia Sanchez Deepa Fernandes, WBUR SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Sonia Sanchez is one of the most celebrated and honored poets in the country. She is also one of the founders of the movement to create ethnic studies departments at colleges and universities throughout the United States. Sanchez talks about the past and the future on this episode of Here & Now. |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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