First-generation college students drive growth at Southwest Minnesota State
Monday will be cooler with temperatures a bit below normal. Highs will range from the low 60s in the northeast to the low 70s in the southwest. Get the latest weather news on Updraft. 🎙️Coming up on Morning Edition: Southwest Minnesota State University leaders strengthened ties to local K-12 schools and embraced the region’s growing diversity. The result is an upswing in students fueled largely by the children of first-generation immigrants. It's made Southwest one of the few four-year public universities in Minnesota where enrollment is rising. MPR News reporter Hannah Yang brings us the story.
🎧 Coming up at 9 a.m.: Seena Hodges is working to help people understand the effects of racism and injustice in many workplaces today. MPR News host Angela Davis talks to Hodges about her work to create racial equity in the workplace, what it means to be “woke” and the role the arts can play in helping us understand others better. We want to hear from you, too. Have you been a part of a diversity training exercise? How did it go? Tell us about your experience and if it made a difference in the way you interact with the people in your life. Call 651-227-6000 or 800-242-2828 during the 9 a.m. hour. | |
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| | First-generation college students drive growth at Southwest Minnesota State | Like colleges across the country, Southwest Minnesota State University saw its student counts slide in the decade following the 2008-09 Great Recession. The school responded by strengthening ties to local K-12 schools and embracing the region’s growing racial and ethnic diversity. The result: an enrollment upswing fueled largely by the children of first-generation immigrants that’s made Southwest Minnesota State one of the few four-year public universities in Minnesota where student numbers are rising. “Early on our team recognized these are going to be our students in the future, so we changed our vision statement to say SMSU is to be the most inclusive and student-centered university in Minnesota and beyond,” said Kumara Jayasuriya, who took over as the university’s president in July 2019. “We want to create an environment where everyone one of our students feel they belong.”
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