Top stories in higher ed for Monday
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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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Photo: Bradley W. ParksNavigating Basic Needs at Oregon’s Universities and Colleges Elizabeth Gabriel, KLCC SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Daniel Aguirre is a second year student at Central Oregon Community College in Bend. The first-generation college student has big dreams: He wants to become a nurse. But many times, Aguirre has trouble focusing on those dreams because of a lack of stable housing and food. He's not alone. Almost half of college students don’t have enough money to regularly buy healthy food. In Oregon, less than a third of those students applied for the federal food assistance program to help prevent food insecurity. But advocates are hoping those numbers will soon change. |
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Photo: Barbara J. PerenicCOVID-19 Made Child-Care Deserts Even Worse in 2021, Leaving Working Parents to Scramble Elinor Aspegren, USA Today SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Finding good child care challenged many Americans even before COVID-19. Things got tougher during the pandemic, when many day-care centers closed, leaving working parents and student parents to juggle working and studying from home with seeing to their children’s needs. But any sense of relief that might come from more schools reopening and parents returning full time to work or school is being offset by a new dilemma: the growing prevalence of child-care deserts. |
Podcast: Calbright College in the Crosshairs Again John Fensterwald and Ashley Smith, EdSource SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The creation of Calbright College in 2019 came with big ambitions and a distinct mission to serve underemployed adults. But with little to show so far in certificates awarded, the budget cutters in the legislature are targeting California’s new online community college. On this podcast, Calbright President Ajita Menon makes the case for why the college needs more time. |
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| What Students Want Instructors to Know About Responsive Teaching Beth McMurtrie, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter As a first-generation student from Bangladesh, Hurum Tohfa wants her professors to understand that students don’t all come to science and math classes equally well prepared. Some may have graduated from high-performing high schools or completed internships. Those students are well equipped to handle the expectations of a college classroom. Others, like her, spend their first semester in college just playing catch-up. For many professors, the pandemic shined a light on how much their students have to deal with outside of class. In this interview, students offer insight on professors who adapted to the moment—and what they hope to see when things go back to normal times. |
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Student Stories: The Journey From Community College Serena Truong, Tackling Transfer SHARE: Facebook • Twitter When educators discuss transfer pathways from two-year to four-year colleges, they tend to discuss broad, important topics such as aligning credits and mapping curricula. Something often is missing: the stories of the diverse life experiences of individual students. A collaboration between John Tyler Community College and J. Sargeant Reynolds Community College aims to change that scenario. |
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Why Applications and Enrollment Are Spiking at Historically Black Colleges Susan Adams, Forbes SHARE: Facebook • Twitter When Mikayla Terry applied to college last fall, the 18-year-old made Clark Atlanta University—considered one of the top historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUS) in the country—her top pick. Despite receiving a full scholarship at Saint Leo, a well-regarded Catholic school in Florida, Terry chose Clark Atlanta where she says she felt safe and that her experiences as a Black student mattered. Terry is among a record number of students applying to HBCUs this year, with many institutions reporting both a spike in applications and enrollments. |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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