Top stories in higher ed for Thursday
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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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Train in Vain Anne Kim, Washington Monthly SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Under the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, state and local workforce agencies provide unemployed and underemployed workers “individual training accounts” to pay for training from state-approved providers included on an “eligible training provider list”—an ETPL. The only way an institution can get federal training dollars is to be on a state’s ETPL. But rather than ensuring practical, affordable training for in-demand jobs, the lists are a haven for expensive for-profits and fly-by-night concerns. |
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How to Keep Returning College Students on Track Jeffrey R. Young, Second Acts SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Returning to college after years away from formal education can feel like both a new beginning and a daunting challenge. What sparks students to return? How can colleges help them stay on track? And what informal networks and resources do students create on their own? Three students who headed back to finish a degree offer answers. |
Pamlico Community College Offers Incarcerated Men Second Chances Through Education Katie Dukes, EdNC SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Before becoming president of Pamlico Community College in 2016, Jim Ross admits that he didn’t think much about people in prison. A life-changing visit to the school's education program at Pamlico Correctional Institution soon changed that mindset. Today, Ross is a staunch advocate for the educational rights of people incarcerated in Pamlico County. |
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| Free Tuition Could Solve Community College Enrollment Woes Chris Geary, New America SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Community college enrollment has plummeted since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet, recent enrollment data from Maine suggest state and federal governments can stabilize these declines by making tuition free. While free tuition at community colleges will not solve the college affordability and debt crisis, it can go a long way to reducing barriers for students with low incomes to enroll, or reenroll, in college. |
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Why Some Colleges Are Removing Their COVID-19 Vaccination Mandates Francie Diep, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter As the fall semester begins, thousands of students will return to campuses that have taken the uncommon step of dropping their COVID-19 vaccination mandates. Their rationales reflect the still-complicated reality of a policy once hailed as critical for getting “back to normal” on college campuses. Meanwhile, public-health experts express mixed opinions about the possible effects of relaxing COVID rules. |
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A Policy Wonk’s Turn as President Goldie Blumenstyk, The Edge SHARE: Facebook • Twitter In June, David A. Tandberg took a one-year public service leave of absence from his policy job at the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association to serve as interim president of his alma mater, Adams State University. In this interview, Tandberg discusses the hard practicalities of running a college—and shares updates of the work to increase enrollment and retention and improve pathways to Adams State from local two-year colleges. |
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