Lumina Foundation is committed to increasing the proportion of Americans with high-quality degrees, certificates and other credentials to 60 percent by 2025.
Conservative politicians across the country are busy working to remove the infrastructure and staffing at public colleges to improve diversity, equity, and inclusion.
But will these efforts, if enacted, survive the legal challenges that could follow? Several diversity experts weigh in with their thoughts.
College students have become extremely mobile, with today's learners earning college credit in multiple ways and from multiple sources.
But a new survey finds huge differences of opinion in how faculty at two- and four-year City University of New York schools view students who transfer—and the credits they bring.
For most students who attend a postsecondary education program and complete it, there is a financial payoff. But too many students attend poor-quality programs that fail to give them the support they need to maintain enrollment and graduate.
For these students, the cost of their education ends up being more than their (and taxpayers’) investment.
A handful of Republican-dominated states seemed on the verge of invalidating President Joe Biden's student loan forgiveness plan at the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday, with a majority of the court's conservatives indicating great skepticism.
After three and a half hours, the bottom line remained the same. Unless the court decides that the states have no standing to sue and throws the case out of court, the Biden student loan forgiveness program will likely be struck down. A decision in the case is expected by summer.
A 4.0 GPA student, Alexis Krug rents a camper near Butler County Community College so she can avoid making the four-hour round-trip commute to the Pennsylvania college where she is studying to become a physical therapist assistant.
A new scholarship will help her cover the campground costs. Krug's story underscores the basic needs challenges facing today's students—and the solutions colleges can provide to help.
When Karina Mendez returned to school to become a nurse, she wanted a work-study job that she could balance with classes at the City College of San Francisco.
Thanks to a new state-funded program, Mendez landed one that does more than pay the bills—it gives her a career boost, as well.