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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Photo: Shawn SpenceCross-Disciplinary Approach Instills Hope, Builds Skills, and Fosters Collaboration Shari Finnell, Focus Magazine SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Aisha Rashid, who is working on a degree in physical oceanography and marine biology at the University of Washington, expects the warming planet to create a major tipping point very soon. She is convinced that people will increasingly demand solutions as the impact of climate change hits closer to home. Rashid also predicts that the answers will come from the private sector. The profit motive will accelerate the demand for a skilled environmental workforce, she says, and put to rest concerns that many environmental careers are economically unsustainable. |
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Professors Struggle With Demands to Tend to Students’ Mental Health Kelly Field, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter As college leaders confront what’s been called a crisis in student mental health, many of them are asking professors to play the part of first responders. On a growing number of campuses, professors are stepping up to the role, introducing “mindfulness minutes” in their classes, doing away with midnight deadlines, and offering no-questions-asked mental-health days. At the same time, some professors say they are uncomfortable serving as wellness coaches or trying to recognize what counts as a crisis. |
Debt Collective Erases Nearly $10M of Morehouse College Debt Walter Hudson, Diverse Issues in Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The Debt Collective, the nation’s first debtor’s union, is canceling close to $10 million in student debt for Morehouse College students. The no-strings gift, which eliminates 2,777 accounts for the Fall 2022 term and prior, will enable thousands of Black men to receive their diplomas, access their transcripts, pursue further education, and move on with their lives, say organizers. |
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| In Three Years, She Paid Down $27,000 in Student Loan Debt. Just $10,000 Left to Go. Lisa Philip, WBEZ SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Brianna Kidd graduated from Elmhurst University in 2015 with a bachelor’s degree in psychology—and $42,000 in student debt. For three years, her monthly loan payments went toward interest, not the principal. But Kidd refuses to give up. Kidd represents one of the demographics most burdened by student debt. A year after completing a bachelor’s degree, Black women on average hold $38,800 in federal loans. That amount, which is close to what Kidd owed, far exceeds the average debt held by any other group. |
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Photo: Carlos Castillo/KPBSHundreds of U.S. Students Cross the Border Daily to attend College in Tijuana Gustavo Solis, Public Radio International SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Thousands of students in Mexico commute daily to attend school in the United States. But there are also those who travel each day in the opposite direction. Over the past few years, Centro de Ensenanza Tecnica y Superior in Tijuana has worked hard to appeal to students north of the border. Residents in the United States now make up 10 percent of the student body at the university, drawn by cheaper tuition and smaller class sizes. |
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US Bans Most Withholding of Transcripts Katherine Knott, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter A federal policy change may give thousands of students access to transcripts and academic credits that their colleges have withheld because they owed the institutions money. The new rule, part of a broad package of regulations the U.S. Education Department unveiled yesterday, could amount to a national ban on the practice of transcript withholding, experts say. |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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