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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.

Sept. 17, 2024

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Georgia Tech to Study How to Make Lifetime Learning Better

Johanna Alonso, Inside Higher Ed

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From online learning to artificial intelligence, colleges worldwide have grappled with how best to deploy technology to help their students succeed—especially nontraditional students, who might opt to study fully remotely to accommodate family or work obligations.

 

Now the Georgia Institute of Technology is hoping to position itself at the forefront of those conversations with its new College of Lifetime Learning, announced earlier this month, which will soon be home to a slate of new programs and research focused on the intersection of learning and technology.

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Penn State Offered Buyouts. At This Campus, 40 Percent of Staff Raised Their Hands.

Adrienne Lu, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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At Pennsylvania State University at New Kensington, a tight-knit campus about 30 minutes northeast of Pittsburgh, faculty members and staff kicked off the fall semester with a sense of dread.

 

Forty percent of the staff and 10 percent of the faculty there took voluntary buyouts that were offered across the system’s regional campuses earlier this year. Among those leaving the campus, where enrollment has dropped by about a third over the past 10 years, were the registrar, the director of student affairs, all three employees in the business and finance office, and the chancellor.

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Class of 2025: Junior Year Brings New Expectations and Worries About Life After High School

Rob Manning, Oregon Public Broadcasting

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Several students are behind on credits and trying to catch up. Some are struggling to stay motivated as school gets more difficult. Others are excelling in class but worried about what comes next.

 

The Class of 2025 is heading into its last year of high school. They represent the first class expected to meet a goal the state of Oregon set in 2012: that every student would successfully complete high school. Twenty-seven students from the Class of 2025 share their fears and expectations of life after high school.

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Petitioning for the Right to Work

Diverse Issues in Higher Education

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Undocumented students in California’s higher education system may soon be able to get a job in California’s public universities and colleges.

California would become the first state in the nation to employ undocumented college students without legal work permits, pending a signature from Gov. Gavin Newson.

 

The landmark legislation, Assembly Bill 2586, passed the state legislature in a final 41-7 assembly vote last month. As of this writing, the governor—who has not stated a position on the bill—has until the end of September to sign or veto it.

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A Little Help Goes a Long Way

Melanie Marshall, Community College Daily

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Tuition and other college expenses are familiar challenges for many community college students. But other smaller costs, such as testing and licensing fees, can also hamper those who are about to launch their careers.


The San Diego Community College District aims to help with a new program that quickly reimburses healthcare students for all required licensing, certification, and testing fees. Under the Ready2Work program, fees are covered through private donors, foundations, and some public funds.

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How States Are Making College More Affordable

Matt Gandal, Forbes

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Despite the valid concerns around affordability, the fact remains that higher education is, on the whole, worth it. The share of American jobs that will require some level of post-high school education or training is expected to reach 85 percent by 2031.

 

But for many students who dream of continuing their education beyond high school, the cost of college remains an impossible challenge. Some innovative states are stepping up to address this affordability crisis through creative financial aid policies—and more are expected to follow suit.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

An AI Tutor Helped Harvard Students Learn More Physics in Less Time

Jill Barshay, The Hechinger Report

How Texas Southmost College Meets the Labor Needs of Local Industry

Steve Taylor, Rio Grande Guardian

Elon University and AAC&U Release Student Guide to AI

Rhea Kelly, Campus Technology

College Alternatives Gain Momentum as Students Seek Affordable, Career-Focused Options

Erin Weeks, The Aiken Standard

How to Build a Value-Rich Education That Connects Adult Learners to Industry

Susan Zukoski and Errin Heyman, The EvoLLLution

RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY

How Can Colleges Use Predictive Algorithms Equitably? A Conversation With Dr. Denisa Gándara

John Luke Piepgras and Denisa Gándara, Institute for Higher Education Policy

No More DEI Offices in the UNC System, But Changes Vary by University, Reports Show

Korie Dean and Kyle Ingram, The News & Observer

America’s Institutions Retreat From Activism

Erica Pandey, Axios

Opinion: The Future of Preferences in College Admissions

The Wall Street Journal

Opinion: Behind the Desk: Perspectives of Black Community College CEOs

Tina King, David M. Johnson, and Jamal Cooks, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

STUDENT SUPPORTS

Promoting Suicide Prevention on Campuses

Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed

Louisiana's Six Collegiate Recovery Programs Reach Out to Students Seeking Way Out of Addiction

Judy Bergeron, NOLA

As Student Hunger Persists at Colleges, Higher Education Tries Out Providing Free Food

Jason Gonzales, Rocky Mountain PBS

Commentary: How California Can Unlock Multigenerational Economic Mobility and Success

Su Jin Jez and Christopher Nellum, EdSource

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Alabama Higher Education Enrollment Up, Despite Financial Aid Form Woes

Jemma Stephenson, Alabama Reflector

Enrollment Dip and Rising Costs Lead UNT to Make $8.5 Million in Cuts

Lucinda Breeding-Gonzales, The Denton Record-Chronicle

Georgia's Governor Says a Program to Ease College Admission Is Boosting Enrollment

The Associated Press

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Centering Black Women’s Experiences Regarding College Choice

The Century Foundation

Institutional and Student Responses to Free College: Evidence From Virginia

Community College Research Center

Competencies for the College Presidency: A National Study of Effective Leadership in Higher Education

Academic Search

Who Benefits From Colorado’s New Free College Program?

Urban Institute

Webinar: What Students Want in Training, Certification, and Education Courses: Survey Report Findings and Insights

University Business

Virtual Forum: Where the Humanities Are Thriving

The Chronicle of Higher Education

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Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

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