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August 8, 2024

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Where Upward Transfer Fails and How Institutions Are Improving Processes

Voices of Student Success

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Many community college students aspire to earn a bachelor’s degree, but institutional barriers often prevent successful transfer and completion. Those barriers include a loss of credits, which slows their progress toward graduation and increases the costs associated with higher education.

 

On this podcast, transfer advocates discuss the latest strategies and processes to improve transfers across the country. Pamela Johnston of Tallahassee State College joins the conversation to describe how her school has revised its advising process to make registration, transfer planning, and working with advisors more seamless for students.

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Tim Walz's Wife, Gwen, a Former Teacher, Is a 'Champion' of College Behind Bars

Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy, USA Today

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When Max Kenner, founder of the Bard Prison Initiative, first met Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz's wife, Gwen, more than a decade ago, he immediately knew he’d found an ally. A former teacher like her then-Congressman husband, Walz wanted to know everything about Kenner's initiative to educate prisoners.

 

And now that Vice President Kamala Harris has selected Tim Walz as her running mate in her presidential campaign, there may be a member of the second family with the strongest commitment to prison education yet.

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Report: Designing Online Courses for Students With Disabilities

Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed

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When designed well, online education has the potential to promote access for students with disabilities, as well as academic success and degree completion for these learners.

 

A recent report from the Center for Higher Education Policy and Practice at Southern New Hampshire University highlights obstacles in online education for students with disabilities and some of the ways institutions can aid disabled students’ educational pursuits.

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Decision Guide: What Happens to Education Under Trump vs. Harris

Lauren Camera, U.S. News & World Report

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Kamala Harris and Donald Trump offer two starkly different views on the federal government’s role in education. On the higher education front, Harris is expected to build on the Biden’s administration pursuit of student loan debt cancellation and boost funding for Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

 

Trump, meanwhile, favors abolishing the U.S. Department of Education, rolling back Title IX protections for LGBTQ students, and prosecuting colleges that maintain diversity, equity, and inclusion policies.

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UC Students Push for a Place to Get—and Stay—Sober on Every Campus

Mikhail Zinshteyn, CalMatters

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Four years clean from methamphetamine and with five associate degrees in hand from a community college in California’s Central Coast, Cheech Raygoza began his undergraduate studies at the University of California, Berkeley, in 2022, feeling like he was alone in prison—again.

 

But over time, those feelings began to change as he met more drug recovery students through a small program at UC Berkeley. The student government now wants every campus to have a collegiate recovery center, programs that offer support groups and other tools to help students battle addiction.

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Deep Dive: How Today’s Adult Education System Can Better Address the Needs of Its Learners

Laura Aka, WorkingNation

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Adult learners are not a one-size-fits-all population. However, the estimated eight million adult learners in the United States do share one thing in common: They are learners who have not followed the traditional pathway from high school to college to career.

 

Beth Doyle of the Council for Adults and Experiential Learning breaks down today's adult education system and the strategies and supports that employers and colleges must provide to create more pathways to opportunities for these learners.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

How One Ohio Community College Is Trying to Help English, Arts, and Communications Majors Land Jobs

Amy Morona, Signal Cleveland

Triad Community Colleges Helping Fill Growing Need for Tech Jobs

Michael Hennessey, WGHP

UA-Fayetteville Joins STARS Network, Focuses on Access for Rural Students

Ryan Anderson, The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

More Pennsylvania Teachers Are Leaving the Profession, According to Penn State Researcher

Sydney Roach, WPSU

Tech in Classrooms Could Be Key to Addressing Idaho Health Worker Shortage

Eric Tegethoff, Public News Service

An AI-Ready Workforce Will Need ‘Durable Skills’

Mark Wolf, National Conference of State Legislatures

STUDENT SUPPORTS

New Program Gives High School Students a Jump-Start Toward a Teaching Degree

Makenzie Huber, South Dakota Searchlight

University of Dayton Makes ‘Flyer Promise’ to Support Students

Dayton Daily News

Using Student Data to Tackle Attrition and Boost Student Success and Retention

Miriam Porras, Madeline Joy Trimble, and Daniel Rossman, Ithaka S+R

Nonprofit Helps Children of Incarcerated Parents Go to College

Sophie Rosenthal and Allison Seymour, WUSA

AFFORDABILITY

Report Highlights Cost Burdens for HBCU Families

Johnny Jackson, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

It’s a Boon to Military Families, But How Much Does Tuition Benefit Program Cost Va. Colleges?

Nathaniel Cline, Virginia Mercury

College Advocacy Group Explains Underlying Frustration Behind Student Loan Debt

Cameron Conner, Missourinet

New Student Debt Relief Policies Fix Broken Promises and Benefit Borrowers Most in Need

Sara Partridge, Madison Weiss, and Brendan Duke, Center for American Progress

A Textbook Case on How One University Is Saving Students $10 Million

Alcino Donadel, University Business

Here’s How Families Are Covering the Rising Cost of College

Jessica Dickler, CNBC

STATE POLICY

California Budget Deficit Sidelines More Bills

Lynn La, CalMatters

A Decade After Scott Walker’s Bill, U of Wisconsin May See First Mass Layoff of Tenured Faculty

Ryan Quinn, Inside Higher Ed

Faculty Unions Sue FSU, UF, FL Board of Governors Over Rights to Arbitrate Employment Disputes

Jackie Llanos, Florida Phoenix

Indiana Attorney General Files to Dismiss Challenge to State’s 'Intellectual Diversity' Law

Whitney Downard, Indiana Capital Chronicle

A New Illinois Bill Would Transform How the State Funds Higher Education

Peter Medlin, Northern Public Radio

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

The Long-Run Impacts of Banning Affirmative Action in US Higher Education

National Bureau of Economic Research

Webinar: A Demographic Shift: From the Margins to Center Stage

The Hunt Institute

Webinar: Women in Higher Education Leadership on Lived Experiences and Lessons Learned

American Council on Education

Virtual Forum: What’s Next for Dual Enrollment?

The Chronicle of Higher Education

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Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

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