Top stories in higher ed for Wednesday
To view this email as a web page, click here. |
|
---|
| Lumina Foundation is committed to increasing the proportion of Americans with high-quality degrees, certificates and other credentials to 60 percent by 2025. |
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
Why Haven’t More Colleges Closed? Rebecca S. Natow, The Chronicle Review SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Last spring’s abrupt, pandemic-induced pivot to virtual learning led to tremendous financial disruption for colleges. The educational technology came with a lofty price tag. So did retrofitting campuses to comply with public-health guidance, extra campus cleanings, and personal protective equipment—to say nothing of smartphone screening apps and the cost of COVID testing itself. The economic losses have been steep—one estimate comes in at $183 billion. Prognosticators predicted mass shutterings. That hasn’t happened, but other enormous changes are underway. |
|
---|
Knowing the Numbers on Student Borrowers of Color Doesn’t Mean You Understand the Problem Terri Taylor, Medium SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Anyone who pays attention to higher education policy should know by now the outsized debt burdens shouldered by our Black, Hispanic or Latino, and Native American students. And yet we haven’t moved from admiring the problem to implementing solutions, in part because the space has been dominated by white policy experts (who are, frankly, like me). A collection of essays called Changing the Narrative on Student Borrowers of Color aims to bring Black, Hispanic, and Indigenous voices and perspectives to this challenge. Written mostly by experts of color, the goal is to establish the right narrative centered on the dignity of students of color and our responsibility to understand them and design solutions around that understanding. |
|
---|
| Podcast: Higher Ed’s Gap Year Evan Smith, Point of Order SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Access and affordability. Overdue conversations about equity and justice and a need to better serve the underserved. Newer conversations about remote learning. These topics and more have been top of mind for college leaders across the country as they continue to battle a year-long public health emergency. Renu Khator, president of the University of Houston, talks about a difficult 12 months of disruption and dislocation for the more than 47,000 students on her campus—and what state lawmakers can do to help. |
|
---|
Miguel Cardona Confirmed as Education Secretary. What It Means for Students and Loan Borrowers Adam S. Minsky, Forbes SHARE: Facebook • Twitter In a vote of 64 to 33, the U.S. Senate confirmed Miguel Cardona on Monday as President Joe Biden's Secretary of Education. During his confirmation hearing, Cardona recognized racial disparities in higher education and student loan debt, arguing that the student loan crisis perpetuates a system of “haves and have-nots.” While stopping short of specifically committing to widespread student debt cancellation as some advocates have called for, he promised to provide relief to student loan borrowers. |
|
---|
|
|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|