Top stories in higher ed for Friday
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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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America Needs Carpenters and Plumbers. Try Telling That to Gen Z Mary Yang, NPR SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Justin Mwandjalulu, 20, loves to build stuff. As a carpentry apprentice, he installs drywall in houses with the rest of his construction crew. Mwandjalulu is fulfilling his childhood dream of becoming a carpenter. But that also makes him an exception to the rule. While Gen Z—often described as people born between 1997 and 2012—is on track to become the most educated generation, fewer young people are opting for traditionally hands-on jobs in the skilled trade and technical industries. |
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Photo: Hart Van Denburg/CPR NewsColorado Has Two Job Openings for Every Available Worker. Here’s the Plan to Fill That Gap Jenny Brundin, Colorado Public Radio SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Colorado is launching a full-frontal assault to connect more Coloradans to high-demand, often better-paying jobs. The gargantuan task means enticing businesses to train or upskill workers and targeting historically untapped groups with more training and education opportunities. |
‘I Did All of It,’ Acknowledges Mastermind of Breathtaking College Admissions Scandal Liz Willen, The Hechinger Report SHARE: Facebook • Twitter This week's sentencing of William "Rick" Singer brings to an end the college admissions scandal known as Varsity Blues. In court, Singer expressed regret for his actions—a statement that matters little right now. What does matter, and what will always matter, is the unequal system of elite college admissions. After a repentant Singer is hauled off to prison for three and half years (prosecutors had asked for six), will money and connections play less of a role in who gets into the nation’s top colleges? |
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| How Penn State Abandoned a Big Pledge on Racial Justice Nick Anderson, The Washington Post SHARE: Facebook • Twitter After the 2020 police killing of George Floyd, Eric J. Barron joined higher education leaders nationwide in pledging solidarity with protesters seeking racial justice. But like his peers elsewhere, the president of Pennsylvania State University faced intense pressure to take actions that would outlast the rhetoric. By the time Barron retired this past spring, Penn State had announced the formation of a Center for Racial Justice. Now, though, with a change in leadership, that project is off the table. |
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Cal State Teaching Assistants and Other Student Employees Could Follow UC to a Strike Ashley Smith, EdSource SHARE: Facebook • Twitter When graduate students and researchers at the University of California launched the nation’s largest strike of academic workers in American history, they may have set an example for what California State University student employees might do at the state’s other massive university system. CSU will start bargaining with the academic student employees and other staff unions this spring. And if negotiations don’t go well, some workers say they may follow in UC workers’ steps and go on strike. |
Rhetoric vs. Reality on Racial Economic Equity Elyse Ashburn, Work Shift SHARE: Facebook • Twitter A recent wave of Big Tech layoffs is raising concerns about whether corporations and funders will back away from their commitments to take on racial inequity amid fears of an economic slowdown. Among those worries: What will the layoffs and hiring freezes mean for the nascent efforts by some companies to look beyond degrees in hiring? And how secure are the jobs held by Black and Latino workers hired through alternative paths such as apprenticeships or tech on-ramps? Michael Collins of Jobs for the Future weighs in. |
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