Lumina Foundation is committed to increasing the proportion of Americans with high-quality degrees, certificates and other credentials to 60 percent by 2025.
Multiple voter-registration organizations have turned their attention to students at Historically Black Colleges and Universities in recent years, recognizing the institutions as key players in engaging young Black voters.
And this year, of course, HBCU voters are directly in the spotlight as Kamala Harris vies for the country’s highest office. Members of the vice president’s Black sorority, Alpha Kappa Alpha, and other Black Greek life organizations continue to make headlines for ramping up efforts to galvanize voters this election season.
The striking results from the first round of Florida’s controversial state-mandated post-tenure reviews have confirmed the fears of many faculty advocates at its flagship campus, who criticized what they saw as a rushed and unfair process and top-down evaluation criteria.
For instance, more than a quarter of the faculty members identified for review at the University of Florida either didn't measure up, resigned, or retired.
Student mental health concerns are on the rise, and college leaders are addressing them in every area of campus life. Some are turning their attention to campus facilities and the role space, light, sound, and décor can play in student learning and healthy living.
In this interview, design experts discuss the science behind environmental wellness and how colleges are adapting to serve their students. Lauren Kehoe of New York University joins the conversation to describe how her school created a safe space for neurodiverse students to study and alleviate stress.
Heading into a divisive national election, a new poll shows that when it comes to education, at least, Americans overwhelmingly agree that the next president should focus on two things: preparing students for careers and attracting top teachers who will stay in the profession.
But beyond those narrow avenues of agreement, the country is separated by large partisan differences on issues ranging from student mental health to paying for college.
The head of the Universities of Wisconsin system plans to ask for $855 million over the next two fiscal years in a push to shed its ranking of 43rd out of 50 states in public funding and reach the national median. The request will be presented to the Board of Regents today. If approved, it will go to Gov. Tony Evers for consideration in his 2025-27 budget proposal.
Along with boosting state funding, the proposal would extend the state’s tuition promise—which covers tuition and fees for lower-income students—to enrollees from families earning up to $71,000 in adjusted gross income.
Across the United States, rural schools often struggle to provide the kinds of academic opportunities that students in more populous areas might take for granted. Although often the hub of their communities, rural schools tend to struggle with a shrinking teaching force, budgets spread too thin, and limited access to employers who can help.
A coalition of nine rural districts wants to change that by partnering with higher education and business leaders to expand career and college pathways for students.