Top stories in higher ed for Wednesday
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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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Photo: Callaghan O'Hare‘It’s Time’: As Congress Debates Citizenship Legislation Yet Again, a DACA Recipient Grows Frustrated Maria Sacchetti, The Washington Post SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Javier Quiroz crossed the U.S.-Mexico border as a young boy. Today, he is a registered nurse who paid his way through college and then fought to save lives in a pandemic that nearly took his father and infected him, his wife, and their baby girl. Despite his parents’ earlier warnings that college might be out of reach, his mother urged him to keep trying. “Push the boundaries,” she would tell him, and it became a verbal tic. Now, Quiroz waits. He wants Congress to finally create a pathway to citizenship for him and his parents, whom he calls the “original dreamers.” |
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Colleges Can Teach How to Open Eyes and Ears Suzanne Rivera and G. Gabrielle Starr, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter As the world watches the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin for the murder of George Floyd, students on college campuses across the country are trying to make sense of its meaning. Higher education plays a vital role in helping people understand the Chauvin trial and its implications, along with other examples of the brutality of racism, write Suzanne Rivera and G. Gabrielle Starr in this essay. |
What If Students Didn’t Have to Leave Community Colleges to Earn Bachelor’s Degrees? Rebecca Koenig, EdSurge SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Community colleges that aim to create a bachelor’s degree program face several challenges, including stricter accreditation standards that may require hiring new faculty or raising money to improve facilities. Yet chief among the obstacles can be resistance from other higher ed institutions that fear new bachelor’s degree pathways will draw away students. But proponents say that embedding baccalaureate pathways within community colleges advances their mission to help all students succeed and local regions thrive—especially those people and places not well-served by other higher education options. |
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| Photo: Luis AlvarezEven as Colleges Pledge to Improve, Share of Engineering and Math Graduates Who Are Black Declines Melba Newsome, The Hechinger Report SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Amida Koroma says she was often the only Black student in her bioengineering classes at the University of Maryland. “Sometimes, it feels like I have to prove myself all over again,” she admits. This semester, Koroma changed her major to psychology. The supply of Black scientists, engineers, and mathematicians is flat or falling even as demand for workers in those fields grows at double the rate of other occupations. And while some institutions have stepped up support for students of color in STEM majors, the pandemic is complicating many of those efforts. |
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Podcast: (College) Credit Where Credit Is Due Jonathan S. Fansmith, Mushtaq Gunja, and Sarah Spreitzer, dotEDU SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Last month, a task force of college and university presidents and chancellors released a report on how to modify existing transfer of credit practices to best support student success. Two members of the task force, Anne Holton and Anne Kress, talk about reimagining transfer policies on this episode of dotEDU. |
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Has the Pandemic Permanently Changed Higher Education? Catharine Richert and Kelly Gordon, MPR News SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The pandemic dramatically changed the look and feel of higher education this past year. Students attended classes online and were often asked to stay in their dorms. Meanwhile, enrollment plummeted, accelerating a cash-flow crisis that many institutions were grappling with even before the pandemic. Could this be the moment higher education makes big changes, permanently? Higher education experts weigh in on what the new normal in higher ed may one day look like. |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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