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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How Will the Coronavirus Change Higher Education for Incarcerated Students? Sara Weissman, Diverse Issues in Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Like the rest of the higher education landscape, college programs in prisons must rethink how they teach their students during the coronavirus. While some facilities still allow educators in as essential staff, many are temporarily pivoting to remote learning for students’ safety, despite “variable” access to technology. |
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College Students’ Siloed Safety Net Wesley Jenkins, The Urban Institute SHARE: Facebook • Twitter For most policymakers, Adam Ramsdell, 40, probably doesn’t resemble the stereotypical first-time college student. He’s older and independent, not a teenager living in a dorm and relying on his parents’ support. But Ramsdell represents a common college student demographic. With the pandemic shutting down many job opportunities, working students like Ramsdell are often left with an impossible choice: focus on education but lack money for food, or work enough hours to meet Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) eligibility but compromise their education. |
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| Connect the Generations Online Maura Mahoney, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Despite leaving campus, many students are continuing—even expanding on—their service-learning projects. Motivated to help, and with time to spare, they’ve figured out ways to connect with children, senior citizens, and other people in the community who may be lonely or need support. |
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Rethinking College, or at Least Fall Semester, During Coronavirus? You Risk Not Graduating Chris Quintana, USA Today SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Northeastern University had always been a reach for Henry Huynh. After initially attending a public college, the first-generation student from Boston finally got into his dream school. "It changed my life," he says. A year later, the coronavirus changed his life again. Huynh plans to enroll in the fall semester—his financial aid depends on it—but his heart just isn’t in his online studies. For first-generation and low-income students like Huynh, taking a semester or a year off—to work or to wait for a more stable outlook—could mean they never graduate. |
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