Top stories in higher ed for Wednesday
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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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Record Enrollment at Maine College Offering Diverse Learning Options Post-Pandemic Jeffrey Brown, PBS NewsHour SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The COVID-19 pandemic has forced colleges and universities across the country to adapt like never before. And it's continuing to impact the college experience for millions of students. But Unity College in Unity, Maine, has taken this time to transform itself, using lessons of the COVID-19 era to rethink the way it delivers education. Those efforts—which include offering students the choices of online, hybrid, or in-person learning—are paying off in record enrollment. |
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Photo: AlamyHow Does a College Decide Whether to Change Its Name? Sarah Brown, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Last summer, colleges everywhere faced calls to cut ties with historical figures or symbols that embodied racism in some way. For a few institutions, the demands were more existential—because their very names honor those figures or symbols. Many colleges have stripped names from campus buildings because they celebrated controversial aspects of U.S. history. But actually renaming a college is more complicated. |
Podcast: Take What You Have, Build What You Need—Innovation in Higher Ed Dakota Pawlicki, Medium SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Innovation has become a buzzword in the world of higher education. Yet, despite its prevalence, college leaders, policymakers, and education advocates often struggle to provide a clear definition of the concept. On this podcast, Youngbok Hong of Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, veteran journalist Paul Fain, and David Wilson of Morgan State University share their thoughts on the practical and philosophical elements of innovation—plus how colleges and universities can build cultures of innovation to improve student outcomes. |
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| Photo: Mike Belleme A Fading Coal County Bets on Schools, But There’s One Big Hitch Eduardo Porter, The New York Times SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Lillian Keys did something rare among her peers: She came back. After receiving her bachelor’s degree from Concord University in Athens, West Virginia, the 24-year-old English teacher returned home to Welch to teach at Mount View High School, from which she graduated in 2014. Keys is on the front line of an unusual strategy to restore promise to this corner of coal country, laid low by the long, inexorable decline of the mining industry upon which it built its fortune. A fourth- or fifth-generation native of the hollows of Appalachia, living in her grandparents’ former home, she embodies the idea of education as a bridge to a more promising future. |
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Photo: Branden RodriguezCollege Graduate Honors Parents With Photos Taken in Field Where They Work Kiara Brantley-Jones, ABC News SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Jennifer Rocha, a recent graduate of the University of California, San Diego, decided to honor her parents by taking graduation photos in the farm fields where they worked to support her education. Her tribute has since gone viral. "I wanted to take those pictures out there, specifically in the field, because that's what made me go to college," Rocha says. "That was my dad's lesson of saying, if you don't pursue a higher education, you're going to be working here the rest of your life." |
Descendants of Enslaved People Get Checks in One of the First Cash Reparations Programs Ari Shapiro, NPR SHARE: Facebook • Twitter For more than a century, the Virginia Theological Seminary relied on the forced labor of Black Americans. Now the seminary is sending annual cash payments of $2,100 to the descendants of those individuals. It's one of the first cash reparations programs in the country, and it's meant to recognize the Black people who worked on campus for little or no money during the time of slavery, reconstruction, and Jim Crow. Ian Markham is president and dean of the seminary, and he proposed the reparations program. In this interview, he and a beneficiary of the effort, Gerald Wanzer, describe the significance of this moment. |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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