Top stories in higher ed for Wednesday
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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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Podcast: Farewell to a Remote Year Jeff Selingo and Michael Horn, Future U SHARE: Facebook • Twitter It has been an unprecedented academic year for higher education. On Future U's final episode of the season, the hosts reflect on how the pandemic reshaped the college expectations and lives of students and families, revisit the stories that made headlines, and look ahead to next fall. |
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‘Credentials as You Go’ Can Help College Students—Especially Adults and People of Color Wendy Sedlak, Lumina Foundation SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Adult learners are widely diverse in terms of age, work and life experiences, and family and civic obligations. For many adult students, the time it takes to earn a degree, including an associate degree, can be overwhelming. An incremental credentialing system offering “credentials as you go” recognizes learning as it occurs in stages. The idea has attracted interest because of its potential to more quickly help those hurt in the economic downturn. That’s especially true if they are also high-quality credentials—those that lead to good jobs and further education. |
The Return of Earmarking Alexis Gravely, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter After a 10-year moratorium, the House and Senate Appropriations Committees are once again accepting proposed earmarks from lawmakers. This time, however, the provisions come with several reforms that could make higher education institutions prime recipients of the funding. |
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| The Pandemic Created a Child-Care Crisis. Mothers Bore the Burden. Claire Cain Miller, The New York Times SHARE: Facebook • Twitter When schools and child-care centers shut down last spring, 5.1 million American mothers stopped working for pay. Today, 1.3 million of them remain out of work. Their losses are more than economic. Across backgrounds and careers, they describe a loss of identity. |
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Students Struggling With Mental Health Often Confide in Professors. They Want More Guidance on How to Help. Audrey Williams June, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter In an academic year shaped by a global health crisis, faculty members have encountered plenty of students who are grappling with mental-health issues. But a recent report shows that, despite their willingness to assist students in distress, professors don’t know as much as they’d like about how to get them the help they need. |
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Community Colleges Are Innovators. A New Effort Aims to Share Their Insights. Rebecca Koenig, EdSurge SHARE: Facebook • Twitter With millions of students and a variety of programs, community colleges have a lot going on. Yet all this teaching and learning isn’t always as well recognized or as thoroughly studied as the work taking place at four-year institutions. The Community College Practice-Research-Policy Exchange plans to change that. The new effort will solicit ideas from the faculty and administrators who run community colleges day to day, convey those insights to higher ed researchers, and then deliver their analyses back to educators. |
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