Top stories in higher ed for Friday
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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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Blurring the Lines Between Education and Workforce Javeria Salman, The Hechinger Report SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The pandemic is giving new life to the idea of erasing the arbitrary dividing line between high school and college and creating instead a system that more tightly connects to the world of work and careers. The concept is called the “Big Blur," and some states and communities are already experimenting with variations of the approach. |
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White House Calls on States to Train Workers to Renew America’s Infrastructure Elyse Ashburn, Work Shift SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The Biden Administration's new Talent Pipeline Challenge is a summer-long initiative to get labor unions, companies, and state and local governments to work together to train workers for millions of new jobs expected to be created by the bipartisan infrastructure law. The effort focuses on training workers for good jobs in the broadband, construction, and electric vehicle sectors. It also involves partnerships between industry and education providers, with the goal of expanding apprenticeships. |
Recruiting Talent to New Industries Using VR Victoria Lim, WorkingNation SHARE: Facebook • Twitter As part of an effort to recruit new talent for in-demand industries, state officials in Arkansas are giving students and job seekers a chance to experience the jobs themselves—through virtual reality. The program, which incorporates VR experiences created by an economic development platform called TRANSFR, is the result of a partnership with the Arkansas Office of Skills Development and Arkansas Community Colleges. |
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| Getting a Bachelor's Degree in Prison Is Rare. That's About to Change Elissa Nadworny and Lauren Migaki, NPR SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The incarcerated men in this classroom are painters and physics nerds, deep thinkers, and fast readers. They come from five different gangs; they are white, Native American, Black, and Latino. They are also college juniors and seniors who gather several times a week to take classes from Pitzer College, a small, elite liberal arts school of about 1,000 students located an hour away from the California Rehabilitation Center. |
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‘Ignore the Negativity’: 16 Chicago Valedictorians on Finishing High School in the COVID Era Samantha Smylie, Chalkbeat Chicago SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The Class of 2022 started high school with big hopes and dreams. Then the pandemic happened. And their hopes and dreams turned into uncertainty. In this interview, valedictorians from Chicago Public Schools’ Class of 2022 share their trials, tribulations, and successes. |
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Photo: Jason PramasA Discussion on DACA and the Future of Immigration in North Carolina Mike Collins, WFAE SHARE: Facebook • Twitter A decade ago, the Obama administration gave hope to hundreds of thousands of undocumented individuals with the creation of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. Today, many are unsure of their future. Immigration and policy experts discuss the early days of DACA, the program's roller coaster ride over the past decade, and their fears moving forward. |
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