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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How One Minnesota University More Than Doubled Its Native Student Graduation Rate Caroline Preston, The Hechinger Report SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Charles Golding looked for two things when he was researching colleges: a top economics program and a connection to his Native American culture. Today, he is on pace to graduate from the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities in four years. Nationally, college enrollment rates for American Indian students are dropping, but the state flagship school has seen success in graduating greater shares of indigenous students. Students and faculty credit this progress in closing the gap for native students to the variety of academic and social supports designed to help them feel welcome on campus. |
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How Educator Externships Prepare Today’s Students for Tomorrow’s Workforce Jeff Weld, The EvoLLLution SHARE: Facebook • Twitter It's the age-old question commonly heard in K-12 and college classrooms across the nation: “When will I ever use this?” Students often struggle to connect the dots between traditional classroom curriculum and future workplace or life applications. The Iowa Governor’s STEM Advisory Council is addressing this challenge through the Iowa STEM Teacher Externships Program. During six-week immersions in business and industry in the summer, educators contribute to workplace needs while gaining invaluable insights about how specific educational disciplines translate into the world of work. |
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| To Improve Persistence, This College Asks Professors to Have a 15-Minute Meeting With Each Student Beckie Supiano, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Professors sometimes learn what’s going on in students’ lives when they volunteer it during a class discussion or in a piece of personal writing. But in plenty of other cases, students face problems that hinder their academic performance—and their professors have no idea. That’s part of the reason that Oakton Community College encourages instructors to devote 15-minute meetings to getting to know each student in one of their courses during the first three weeks. The meetings are part of a broader effort called the Persistence Project that seeks to use the connections students form with their professors to keep more of them enrolled. |
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How Micro-Internships Can Help Underserved Students and Your Business MeiMei Fox, Forbes SHARE: Facebook • Twitter In 2016, Jeffrey Moss started Parker Dewey, an organization that facilitates micro-internships as a way to ensure that every college student and recent graduate has equitable access to professional opportunities. Micro-internships are short-term, paid professional experiences that allow students from all backgrounds to explore career pathways, build professional relationships, and showcase their skills to prospective employers. They can prove especially valuable to students who don’t have a stellar academic pedigree, GPA, or family connections, and are therefore otherwise frequently filtered out in the traditional campus recruiting process. |
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