Top Higher Education News for Friday
View in browser
Lumina

Lumina Foundation is committed to increasing the proportion of Americans with high-quality degrees, certificates and other credentials to 60 percent by 2025.

August 2, 2024

Subscribe to this email

TOP STORIES

download - 2024-07-31T140638.596

The Merger That Spared Mills College May Be Erasing Its Identity

Sonel Cutler, The Chronicle of Higher Education

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Zeltin Mozo had been enrolled at Mills College, a small institution for women, when trouble struck. First, leaders of the 170-year-old college announced in 2021 that it would close after years of financial problems. Then the plans changed: The campus, in Oakland, Calif., would actually be absorbed by Northeastern University, a large research university in Boston.

 

For Mozo and other former students, the merger ensured that their academic journey wouldn’t be disrupted by a campus closure. But now they're also mourning the quirky, social-justice-focused college experience that was lost.

istockphoto-1992829736-612x612

Where Do Teachers Want to Teach? and Why?

Linda Darling-Hammond, Forbes

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Teacher shortages have been front and center in the news for a number of years, deepening during the pandemic, and continuing to be a huge issue in many states.

 

Yet, as in all things, states differ in their education policies and in the ways that teachers are prepared, compensated, and supported. These differences can result in dramatically different levels of student access to a diverse, stable, and well-qualified educator workforce across the country.

istockphoto-1488105257-612x612 copy

State Task Force Recommends Using AI Technology in Classrooms, Support for Businesses

Joe Schulz, Wisconsin Public Radio

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Artificial intelligence could transform the future of work in Wisconsin, but state leaders hope to help the technology expand in a way that protects workers and fills existing gaps in the labor force.

 

A task force of state agency officials, industry leaders, representatives from organized labor, and education officials wrapped up months of work on that issue last week. Its final advisory action plan includes policy recommendations around artificial intelligence in K-12 and higher education, government, workforce development, and economic development.

istockphoto-1320569802-612x612

New Study Explores the Experiences and Challenges of Student Parents Across New Mexico

Scott Brocato, KRWG

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Child Trends, a research organization focused on improving the lives of children and youth, recently partnered with Santa Fe Community College to learn more about the experiences of student parents in New Mexico.

 

Their report, “The New Mexico College Student Experience Study," explores the goals, challenges, and needs of student parents in the state. The study’s lead author, Renee Ryberg, discusses the findings and potential solutions in this interview.

istockphoto-174920133-612x612

A Suburban Family Promised Chicago Students Help Paying for College. Then They Backed Out.

Lisa Kurian Philip, WBEZ

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

The college dreams of hundreds of low-income and first-generation students from Chicago are up in the air after a north suburban family backed out on a longstanding commitment to provide scholarships just weeks before the start of classes.

 

Former Abbott Laboratories executive Jack Schuler announced earlier this month that his family’s education foundation was suspending all scholarship payments. The announcement has since left many students scrambling for answers.

istockphoto-857689114-612x612

Video: Workforce Training at the Speed of Business

The Different Voices of Student Success Resource Center

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Maine is the most rural state in the country. It’s also the state with the highest percentage of seniors. For the Maine Community College System, this leaves a unique challenge: How can it engage students from across its remote rural and coastal communities and create curricula that better prepares them to meet the needs of employers?

 

In an effort to nurture home-grown talent and attract individuals from outside Maine, a close partnership between the state government, local employers, and Maine’s community colleges has resulted in greater investments in remote learning and remote work.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

How Developmental Ed Reform Has ‘Stalled’

Tabitha Whissemore, Community College Daily

Accreditation Myth-Busting

Heather F. Perfetti, Bridget Boody, and Amy Moseder, Beyond Transfer

A Move to Bring Freelancing to College Education

Colleen Connolly, Work Shift

An Edtech Giant Declares Bankruptcy. What Might It Mean for Online Higher Ed?

EdSurge

Focus on Tempe, Arizona: Growth Is Driving Opportunity in Skilled Trades, Education, and More

Laura Aka, WorkingNation

Using Student Data to Understand the Economic Value of a Liberal Education

Elizabeth Davidson Pisacreta and Daniel Rossman, Ithaka S+R

 

PRISON EDUCATION

A Partnership to Help Formerly Incarcerated Inmates Get Tech Jobs

Anne Field, Forbes

In This California Prison, Inmates Who Operate a Restaurant for Their Guards and Others ‘Rely on Each Other’

Carol Pogash, CalMatters

Two New Michigan Works! Programs Prepare Jail and Prison Inmates for New Careers

Sarah Rigg, Concentrate

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

UC Sets New Record With Largest, Most Diverse Class of California Students for Fall 2024

Teresa Watanabe, Los Angeles Times

Effects of Texas' Top Ten Percent College Admissions Plan

National Bureau of Economic Research

Berkshire Community College President Says Massachusetts’s New Free Tuition Program Is Already Boosting Student Enrollment

Josh Landes, WAMC

Indiana's New High School Diplomas Spark Concerns Among University Leaders

Rachel Fradette, WFYI

New Agreement Guarantees Community College Graduates Admission to the University of Maine System

Robbie Feinberg, Maine Public

STUDENT SUPPORTS

Starving College Students

Mary Churchill, Inside Higher Ed

Long-Standing Partnership Between UCCS, PPSC Has Been a 'Win-Win'

Nick Smith, The Gazette

JCSU Student Success Initiative Boosts Retention Rates

Herbert L. White, The Charlotte Post (North Carolina)

MU Promises Continued Support for Students, Staff Amidst DEI Division Restructuring

Christian Riley Dutcher, KOMU

University of Arizona Joins STARS Network; Committing to Help Rural Students

Joel Foster, KGUN

Commentary: My Life as a Foster Youth Includes Dreams of College

Andi Mata, EdSource

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Dual Enrollment Equity Pathways: A Research-Based Framework for Expanding College and Career Opportunity for Underserved Students

Community College Research Center

Incomplete: The Unfinished Revolution in College Remedial Education

FutureEd

The Transformational Opportunity of AI on ICT Jobs

Cisco

Event: Communities of Practice: Defining and Measuring Postsecondary Value and Return on Investment

State Higher Education Executive Officers 

Black Entrepreneurship and Education, Training, and Workforce Development

Urban Institute

luminafoundation.org
Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

Facebook
Instagram
LinkedIn

This email is sent to: newsletter@newslettercollector.com

 

This email was sent by:

Lumina Foundation

820 Massachusetts Ave.,Suite 1390

Indianapolis,IN,46204

 

Unsubscribe | Manage preferences