Top stories in higher ed for Monday
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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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Photo: Joyce NugentNew Tribal Colleges Offer ‘Sense of Belonging’ for Native Students But Hit Roadblocks Emma Hall and Charlotte West, CalMatters SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Native American students have the highest high school dropout rate and lowest college-going rate of any racial group in California. Family obligations and feelings of isolation within mainstream colleges are just some of the barriers Native students may have to overcome to access post-high school learning. Advocates say creating more tribal colleges is one way to offset these trends. But in California, new tribal colleges face an uphill battle because of lack of funding and a lengthy accreditation process. |
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Photo: Shelby LumExiting University of Richmond President Ronald Crutcher Speaks on Race, Renaming, and the Future of Higher Ed Eric Kolenich, The Richmond Times-Dispatch SHARE: Facebook • Twitter When Ronald Crutcher came to the University of Richmond in 2015, he became the first Black president of the nearly 200-year-old school. Later this month, he is stepping down. In this interview, Crutcher, 74, reflects on how his institution has changed, the impact of the pandemic, and the future of higher education. |
U.S. Schools Aim to Lure Foreign Students Back Who Shied Away During the Pandemic Karin Fischer, NPR SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The Biden administration is hoping to lure back tens of thousands of international students who stayed away from U.S. campuses during the pandemic. Foreign enrollment fell by 20 percent last year. And that cost colleges and universities almost $10 billion in lost revenue. There is a key challenge, however, when it comes to getting students back: Foreign students were turning away from the United States even before the pandemic. |
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| Biden's Free Community College Plan Won't Succeed Without Robust Transfer Strategies Gelsey Mehl, Higher Ed Dive SHARE: Facebook • Twitter President Joe Biden's American Families Plan proposes an extraordinary investment in college students. If passed by Congress, the plan would provide two years of free community college tuition, among other benefits. In this commentary, Gelsey Mehl of the Aspen Institute College Excellence Program argues that while free community college should get more students on campuses, it won't automatically lead to those students earning bachelor's degrees. To make higher education truly more affordable and equitable, lawmakers and educators need to pair a focus on free community college with effective transfer pathways. |
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Photo: Julia RendlemanWill Students Get Coronavirus Vaccines? Some Colleges Don’t Keep Track. Nick Anderson and Susan Svrluga, The Washington Post SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Two flagship public universities—one in Idaho, the other in Virginia—illustrate a wide gulf in approaches to the pandemic as higher education heads into another gut-check moment. Both want a normal school year despite the summer surge of the dangerous delta variant that is leading campuses across the country to ask students once again to wear masks indoors. One is avoiding vaccination metrics and mandates. The other is keeping close tabs on vaccinations. |
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Where Will Students Apply? Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Even though many colleges aren't wrapped up with admissions for fall 2021, they are starting in on those who will apply this fall and winter to enroll in the fall of 2022. And one big question college leaders have is this: Will students stay away from colleges in states in the South or Midwest that have been doing a poor job of handling coronavirus, and in particular the Delta variant? Or more specifically, will parents urge their children to stay away? |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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