Daily headlines 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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A Growing Number of Community Colleges Are Building HBCU Pipelines Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Historically Black Colleges and Universities have long been on Zaria Miller's radar. But her home state of Michigan doesn’t have one. Miller enrolled at Washtenaw Community College, and while searching online for campus events, she stumbled upon its HBCU Pathway program. The effort is designed for community college students wanting to transfer to HBCUs. As it turns out, Washtenaw is not the only community college creating such pathways. |
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Video Essay: A Student Protester Facing Disciplinary Action Has ‘No Regrets’ Kassie Bracken, Meg Felling, and Mike Shum, The New York Times SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The University of Chicago is what Youssef Hasweh calls his "dream school." Over the past four years, he's tried to make it a dream school for others, too, as part of his work as a student ambassador. Now, as commencement season continues, Hasweh is one of many student protesters around the country who face disciplinary action. With less than two weeks until graduation, his academic future remains in limbo. |
Photo: Robyn VincentThe FAFSA Woes Complicating Federal College Aid Are Especially Acute for Some Detroit Students Robyn Vincent, Chalkbeat Detroit SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Perriel Pace is among many students in limbo across the country because of the rocky rollout of the new Free Application for Federal Student Aid. Despite fixes, the system continues to exclude some students. Others, like Pace, managed to fill out and submit the form, but still, they wait. In Detroit, these challenges are testing the resilience of vulnerable young people who are already facing barriers to higher education. It is a roadblock that looms large in a city where just 17 percent of residents hold a college degree. |
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| Unexpected College Costs: Junk Fees Jon Marcus and Kirk Carapezza, College Uncovered SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Tuition is only part of the cost of college. Bills that contain fees for student activities, athletics, building maintenance, libraries, and even graduation have become an unexpected part of the paying-for-college process. For some students, these added expenses can mean taking out more and more loans or sometimes quitting college altogether. |
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Photo: Hart Van Denburg/CPR News50 Years After First Arriving at CU Boulder, Philip DiStefano Reflects on a Long Career in Higher Education Paolo Zialcita, Colorado Public Radio SHARE: Facebook • Twitter In 1974, Philip DiStefano walked through the doors of the University of Colorado Boulder’s School of Education as an assistant professor. What followed was a 50-year tenure at Colorado’s flagship university in multiple roles, including the chancellorship, the position DiStefano is preparing to vacate this summer. In this interview, DiStefano reflects on how higher education has changed during his long career and the challenges his successor will have to navigate. |
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Illustration: Delcan & Co.+ Danielle Del PlatoIs Higher Ed Growing or Shrinking? Brian O’Leary and Audrey Williams June, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The recent incessant drip of program closures at colleges small and large, public and private, suggests an industry in contraction—and in some ways, that’s the case. But even if it’s true now, it’s taking place against a far larger backdrop of growth. Here is a closer look at how nearly 23,000 new academic programs have been added from 2002 to 2022. |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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