Top Higher Education News for Friday
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 30, 2024

Subscribe to this email

TOP STORIES

download - 2024-08-28T173836.303

He Transformed a Sinking Public-College System. Here’s What He Learned.

Lee Gardner, The Chronicle of Higher Education

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

When Daniel Greenstein took over as chancellor of the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education in 2018, it was bleeding students and money, and he was an unknown quantity as a system leader. Last month, he announced plans to step down in October, having led for six tumultuous years that included merging six of the system’s 14 four-year public universities in an attempt to save all of them from fiscal insolvency.

 

Whether he ultimately “saved” the system still remains to be seen, but Greenstein has shown he can marshal the forces of a large public-university system for change.

istockphoto-2042930556-612x612

Harris Needs Gen Z. Here's Her Plan to Win Them

Elena Moore, Boise State Public Radio

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Vice President Kamala Harris is bolstering her outreach to young people just in time for students to head back to school and as the campaign enjoys an increase in support among Gen Z and younger millennial voters.

 

The campaign plans to invest in new digital ads on campus and social media, double its youth organizing staff around the country, and launch a college campus tour in battleground states.

istockphoto-1552875565-612x612

Podcast: BHEF's Kristen Fox on Bridging the Higher Ed-Business Gap

Julian Alssid and Kaitlin LeMoine, Work Forces 

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Kristen Fox, the CEO of the Business-Higher Education Forum, is well aware of the critical intersection of business and higher education, as well as the importance of creating inclusive solutions for talent challenges.

 

On this podcast, Fox discusses her organization's strategic focus areas, including illuminating skill gaps, developing new work-based learning models, and convening action-oriented forums.

istockphoto-1460535745-612x612

Are Educators a Natural Fit for Public Office? These Candidates Think So

Emily Tate Sullivan, EdSurge

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

When Tim Walz was announced as the running mate for Kamala Harris earlier this month, his ascendancy helped to elevate the idea of educators serving in public office.

 

In many ways, politics is an obvious and natural progression for educators, teacher-candidates and political scientists say. In this interview, five individuals running for election—three classroom teachers, one superintendent, and an early childhood advocate—share their motivations and the skills and experiences that would set them up for success in office, if elected in November.

istockphoto-1051719948-612x612

‘All So Confusing’: Student Loan Borrowers in Limbo After Courts Halt a Popular Plan

Danielle Douglas-Gabriel, The Washington Post

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

The ongoing legal battle over the Biden administration's new income-driven plan, known as Save, has upended loan repayments for millions of borrowers, including Stephanie Rodriguez. This week, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a temporary pause on the program.

 

Without access to a low-cost plan, Rodriguez would see her monthly student loan bill jump from $10 to $601.

istockphoto-1699271996-612x612

How Predatory Master’s Programs Get Away With It

Marc Novicoff, Washington Monthly

SHARE:  Facebook • LinkedIn

Like most graduates of Northwestern University's online master’s of arts in counseling program, Joe Vegas is buried in debt.

 

Fifty-five miles from Northwestern University, in an unfashionable west-of-Chicago suburb, lies Aurora University. The scrappy, unassuming institution offers an addiction-focused mental health master’s degree, also mostly online. It’s classified under the same counseling umbrella as Northwestern's, but it has very different outcomes.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Career Pathways Intermediaries: A Blind Spot in American Education Policy

Matt Gandal, Forbes

National Experts Find Major Manufacturing Workforce Issues in the Region

Meredith Shimer, WBKO (Kentucky)

Teens Are Losing Interest in School, and Say They Hear About College 'A Lot'

Cory Turner, WFAE

2U's Bankruptcy Bonanza: Executives Pocket Millions in Bonuses

Jeremy Bauer-Wolf, New America

‘Nobody Knows Where the Line Is’

Erin Gretzinger and David Jesse, The Assembly

Opinion: For Too Many Learners, Working While in College Is a Barrier to Career Growth

Jane Swift, Higher Ed Dive

RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY

Ph.D.s Are Next in Fight Over Affirmative Action

Lauren Weber, The Wall Street Journal

How Joy and Belonging Can Help Underrepresented Students Succeed in STEM

Tania Otero Martinez, Center for American Progress

Does UNC System Policy Require DEI Offices to Close? What We Know About Campuses' Plans.

Korie Dean, Raleigh News & Observer

California May Ban Legacy Admissions at Colleges. The End of Affirmative Action Is a Reason Why

Mikhail Zinshteyn, CalMatters

Bill Barring Public University Funding of DEI Dies in Legislature

Eric Lampkin, WCBI

SF State Drops Investments in Arms Makers in Deal With Pro-Palestinian Students

Amy DiPierro, EdSource

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Historically Black Colleges See Rising Enrollment

Kathy Wang, GBH News

University of Maine System Sees Highest Enrollment in Three Years

Joe Lawlor, Portland Press Herald

Learning, Enrollment Keep Growing at Santiago Canyon College

Nicole Gregory, The Orange County Register

New Data on Dual Enrollment

Kent Phillippe, DataPoints

Concord Feels Confident About Enrollment at the Start of a New Academic Year

Brad McElhinny, WV MetroNews

Iowa Private Colleges See Mixed Success From Tuition, Financial Aid Changes

Brooklyn Draisey, Iowa Capital Dispatch

STATE POLICY

California Bill Supports Jobs for Undocumented Students

INSIGHT Into Diversity

Virginia Board of Education Approves Changes to Accreditation, Accountability Systems

Nathaniel Cline, Virginia Mercury

How Georgia’s $36 Billion Budget Will Impact K-12 Schools and Higher Education

Sydney Sims, Capital B Atlanta 

North Carolina Community College System Calls for New Funding Model Amid Enrollment Surges, Funding Challenges

Ryan Shaffer, Public Radio for Eastern North Carolina

NEW PODCASTS

Enroll and Retain International Students: Lessons From I-House at UC Berkeley

Changing Higher Ed

Is Your University Headed for a Merger (or Worse)?

Office Hours With EAB

The Enrollment Cliff: Tim Fuller's Perspective

The Higher Ed Marketer

GateWay’s Hybrid Approach — Balancing Tradition and Innovation in Community College Education, With Dr. Amy Diaz

In the Margins

Stackable, Packable, Trackable

The EdUP Experience

Even More Problems With Grades

Teaching in Higher Ed

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