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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How Community Colleges Fit In to the Promise of the CHIPS and Science Act Bianca Quilantan, POLITICO SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The CHIPS and Science Act was signed into law on the promise of jump-starting research and development and building a more inclusive technical workforce. Community colleges, which serve the majority of higher education’s low-income students and students of color, have the potential to become the missing link between aligning technology development and talent development, experts say. |
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A Harbinger for 2023? Presentation College to Close Josh Moody, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Presentation College has been a fixture in the small town of Aberdeen, South Dakota—population 28,324—for more than half a century. The school announced its impending closure this week, making it the latest higher education casualty in a sector squeezed by slumping enrollment and rising costs. Higher education observers fear other embattled institutions may ultimately succumb to the same fate, especially since the spigot of federal relief funds is now shut off. |
High-Demand Jobs, High-Cost Education Lilah Burke, Work Shift SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Community colleges often struggle to afford the facilities and instructors needed to educate students for in-demand technology fields like microelectronics and biotech. But some schools are coming up with creative ways to offer these high-cost programs. Among the strategies: partnership models, incubators, and new funding mechanisms. |
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| The Best Shot for the Supreme Court to Save Loan Forgiveness Jon Edelman, Diverse Issues in Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Many experts believe that the Biden administration’s plan for student loan forgiveness is dead in the water at the conservative-dominated U.S. Supreme Court. But a recent amicus curiae brief filed by two conservative law professors might offer Republican-appointed justices a reason to issue a surprise decision. |
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Young Immigrants Face Obstacles When Navigating the U.S. Labor Market Laura Aka, WorkingNation SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Luana Lima moved to the United States in 2017 from Brazil. She came with a bachelor’s degree in law but found it difficult to get a foothold in the U.S. market. She's not alone. A new report from Upwardly Global documents how young adults under the age of 30 with immigrant backgrounds encounter major roadblocks in their quests to land workforce opportunities that match their skills. |
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/AxiosThe Downfall of Higher Education Rankings Erin Doherty, Axios SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The dean of Harvard Medical School announced this week that the institution will no longer participate in the decades-old U.S. News and World Report ranking list. The move, which follows decisions by several top-ranked law schools to stop cooperating with U.S. News, may suggest that the influence of the longstanding higher education rankings juggernaut is wavering. |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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