Top stories in higher ed for Tuesday
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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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‘Use These Dollars to Change Lives’ Elizabeth Redden, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Community colleges, tribal colleges, and minority-serving institutions all received multimillion-dollar gifts from philanthropist MacKenzie Scott in 2020 and 2021. Scott's gifts placed a spotlight on colleges that don’t always get the recognition they deserve. In this interview, school leaders share how they are putting the money to use. |
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What It Takes to Recruit Future Teachers During the Pandemic Rebecca Koenig, EdSurge SHARE: Facebook • Twitter It’s a tough time to be a teacher. But leaders of college education programs are fighting fatalism by trying new strategies for recruiting and training America’s next batch of teachers. Several strategies focus on an acute pain point: the mismatch between the high cost to earn a degree in teaching and the low pay the profession offers. But the most promising efforts have a common ingredient: close ties between colleges and local K-12 school districts. |
Podcast: The Impact of COVID-19 Learning Disruption Doug Lederman, The Key With Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter College students almost certainly lost ground academically during the pandemic. But how much? And what should colleges be doing to help students recover from the COVID-19 learning disruption? This episode of The Key explores how colleges are adapting their practices and policies in areas such as placement, instruction, grading, and assessment to help students get up to speed. |
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| Stranded Credits From Students With Debt. Is a Bigger Shift Starting? Rebecca Kelliher, Diverse Issues in Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter As many as 6.6 million students nationwide can’t obtain their transcripts because they have unpaid bills—sometimes as little as $25 or less—with a college they once attended. Withholding transcripts from students with outstanding balances is a common practice among colleges and universities. That may be changing. |
Photo: Judy DeHaas, The Denver PostColorado Lawmakers May Expand Program That Gives College Credit in High School Jason Gonzales, Chalkbeat Colorado SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Colorado lawmakers want to expand a program that lets students stay in high school for a fifth year while taking college courses at no cost to them. Advocates say the Ascent program offers the possibility of tuition-free college credit and a head start on a college education, which can be especially helpful to students from low-income backgrounds. |
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What It's Like to Be Free on a College Campus After Finishing High School in Quarantine Ilana Drake, PBS NewsHour SHARE: Facebook • Twitter What is it like to go from spending most of your time as an upperclassman in high school on Zoom or in a virtual setting to an open college campus full of new social opportunities? It can be exhilarating—but also a lot of pressure. Ilana Drake, a first-year freshman at Vanderbilt University, explains in this essay. |
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