Top Higher Education News for Wednesday
View in browser
Lumina

Lumina Foundation is committed to increasing the proportion of Americans with high-quality degrees, certificates and other credentials to 60 percent by 2025.

August 21, 2024

Subscribe to this email

TOP STORIES

download - 2024-08-20T085203.076

Colleges Face Growing Demands to Step Up Enforcement on Student Protesters Who Cross a Line

Amelia Benavides-Colón and Katherine Mangan, The Chronicle of Higher Education

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Pressure is building on colleges to stand firm on punishing students who run afoul of conduct codes during protests against the Israel-Hamas war.

 

Local prosecutors have dropped criminal charges against many of the protesters who were arrested last spring, but many students still face campus disciplinary proceedings. Some campuses will continue working through those hearings well into the fall, leaving students’ status uncertain as the next academic year begins.

download - 2024-08-20T085804.335

New College of Florida Is Dumping Books—and Losing Professors

Ryan Quinn, Inside Higher Ed

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

This past week provided plenty of reminders that Florida governor Ron DeSantis’s conservative overhaul of public higher education in his state still isn’t over—especially not at New College of Florida, where the Republican stacked the Board of Trustees with conservative members back in January 2023.

 

The institution is still undergoing a conservative transformation, as evidenced by the removal of gender studies texts and the departure of the faculty chair and other professors.

istockphoto-1484310898-612x612 copy

What Will Stateville Shutdown Mean for Higher Education Programs Behind Bars?

Charlotte West, WBEZ Chicago

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

The looming closure of Stateville Correctional Center in Joliet, Illinois, has some of the men locked up inside worried about what it will mean for their ongoing education, even as they express relief to leave the dangerous, aging prison.

 

Despite its poor physical conditions, Stateville has some of the most robust programming of any prison in the state due to its proximity to Chicago. The prison currently has five colleges operating there, while many other facilities have no higher education at all.

download - 2024-08-20T090521.071

Central Valley Struggles to Produce College Grads; Key Programs Are Turning That Around

Emma Gallegos, EdSource

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

A new report delivers bad and good news for the Central Valley. The bad news: The vast majority of parents, 79 percent, want their children to get a bachelor’s degree, but just 26 percent of students in the region are on pace to achieve that.

 

The good news: Central Valley educators in both K-12 and higher education are pioneering strategies that could transform the region’s low college attainment rates. 

download - 2024-08-20T182419.707

Each Year, Scores of Accepted Students Drop Out Before College Starts. What’s Behind the College ‘Melt?’

Emma Folts, PublicSource

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

If Lynnsie Hagman had not received help applying for college, she may have become another statistic of “summer melt," a phenomenon in which high school seniors with accepted college offers do not enroll in the fall because of barriers they face during the summer.

 

Financial pressures, family needs, and logistical challenges can all steer away aspiring scholars like Hagman. This year’s bungled rollout of the revised Free Application for Federal Student Aid could make matters worse, advocates predict.

istockphoto-1934274246-612x612

The Movement to Diversify Silicon Valley Is Crumbling Amid Attacks on DEI

Naomi Nix, Cat Zakrzewski, and Nitasha Tiku, The Washington Post

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Groups like Girls in Tech and Women Who Code promised to attract women and people of color to the tech industry. Now they’re closing up shop, laying off staff, or rebranding their efforts to stay afloat.

 

The drop in support for programs that tech companies once touted as a sign of their commitment to adding women, Black people, and Hispanic people to their ranks follows a right-wing campaign to challenge diversity initiatives in court.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

From Panel to Practice: Insights From Varying Degrees 2024 on Higher Education Challenges and Solutions

Cristian Reyes, New America

University of Alabama Program Pushes Professors to Embrace AI

Williesha Morris, Advance Local

Hey, Students: Want a Good Job? Become a Teacher

Chad Aldeman, The 74

Modesto Junior College to Expand Nursing Program in Response to State's Shortage

Julietta Bisharyan, The Modesto Bee

How Nevada Aims to Increase Vocational Education

Kelsea Frobes, The Nevada Independent

Blog: Featured Gig: Founding Dean, UIndy Online, Sease Institute

Joshua Kim, Learning Innovation

RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY

When a U.S. Presidential Candidate Is Called a ‘DEI Hire’

Ryan Quinn, Inside Higher Ed

CU Boulder Chancellor Justin Schwartz Talks DEI, the Value of a Liberal Arts Education

Jason Gonzales, Chalkbeat Colorado

Challenging, Difficult and Uncomfortable: Welcome to Higher Education

Karen Dace, INSIGHT Into Diversity

Report Finds Persistent STEM Career Exposure Gaps for Women

Laura Ascione, eSchool News

Why Colleges Need to Look Out for ‘Hostile Environments’

Michael Vasquez, The Chronicle of Higher Education

PRISON EDUCATION

Augustana Prison Program ‘Game-Changer’ for Ex-Inmate

Kenda Burrows, Quad Cities Regional Business Journal

Texarkana College Expanding Program to Educate the Incarcerated

Jaclyn Tripp, KTAL

Not Your Typical Classroom: A Look Inside a Prison-Based Business Class

Rocky Mountain PBS

A New Educational Program for Inmates at the Ingham County Jail; Setting Inmates Up for Success When Released

Sarah Poulos, WSYM

STUDENT SUPPORTS

For Parenting Students at Community College, It Takes a Village. It Also Takes a Grant

Cassandra Nava, LAist

Bilingual Tutoring Encourages Engagement, Academic Success

Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed

Connecticut Group Provides Clinics to Help Students With FAFSA

Edwin J. Viera, Public News Service

North Carolina’s Revolutionary Transfer Portal Forecasts a New National Push

Alcino Donadel, University Business

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Federal and State Inclusive Apprenticeship Policies

Urban Institute

The State of Apprenticeships
in California

Jobs for the Future

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

American Council on Education

Webcast: Data-Activated Strategies to Advance Student Success

The American Association of Colleges and Universities 

Webinar: Digitally Invisible: How the Internet Is Creating the New Underclass

Brookings Institution

luminafoundation.org
Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

Facebook
Instagram
LinkedIn

This email is sent to: newsletter@newslettercollector.com

 

This email was sent by:

Lumina Foundation

820 Massachusetts Ave.,Suite 1390

Indianapolis,IN,46204

 

Unsubscribe | Manage preferences