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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Young Farmers Face a Barrier Their Parents Didn't: Student Loan Debt Christina Stella, Texas Public Radio SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Cait Caughey is a first-generation farmer who sells produce, herbs, and native plants in southwest Iowa. Without her landlord's permission, scaling up wouldn't be possible. Caughey has about $60,000 in student loan debt and can't afford farmland. She says that's just one way the loans loom over her life. In agriculture, land ownership means security. Losing the lease could end her career. The National Young Farmers Coalition says Caughey's story is a common one, highlighting some of the biggest challenges facing first-generation farmers today—access to land and money. |
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Podcast: The Post-Pandemic University Future U Podcast SHARE: Facebook • Twitter With daily signs of momentum in the effort to vaccinate U.S. adults, college leaders are beginning to plan for a new normal in higher education after the pandemic. The president of Georgia State University, which has been a leader in the student success movement, weighs in on what institutions need to do to improve the student experience in the decade ahead. |
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| Photo: Audrey MaloThe Future of Admissions Jeffrey J. Selingo, The Chronicle Review SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Admissions is often described as a mix of art and science, and in recent years the rise of “big data” has tipped the balance toward science. The rule in admissions is that if you alter how you recruit or admit or enroll students—whatever you do—do so gradually. That way you know—or at least can guess—which lever you pulled had caused which shift in your enrollment model. But the pandemic reshaped almost every dimension of admissions—and did so all at once. Now, admissions officials are left trying to untangle cause and effect. |
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Pandemic Forces Some Teen Students to Work to Support Their Families: 'I Find It Hard to Live Sometimes' Meg Oliver, CBS News SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Since the coronavirus pandemic started, an estimated three million students have not attended virtual or in-person classes. Many are taking jobs to help their families make ends meet. At times, the pressure is overwhelming. Some 17.5 million young people between 16-24 are employed in the United States—and many to help their families get by. Seventeen-year-old Johanna Lopez is one of them. She juggles an exhausting schedule of remote school and part-time work at a fast-food restaurant. Despite her struggles, Lopez remains focused on the future. She hopes to go to college in the fall to become a music therapist. |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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| Blog: Building Trust Teresa Valerio Parrot, Call to Action: Marketing and Communications in Higher Education |
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