Top stories in higher ed for Thursday
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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 a Florida Public University Helps More Students to Graduate Sooner Larry Gordon, EdSource SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The University of South Florida can count Nicholas Bennett as one of its victories in a campaign to help more students—especially low- and moderate-income ones—stay in school and graduate. USF has been doing a lot of things at once to boost its graduation statistics. That includes improvements to its academic advising office, the addition of more tutoring programs, reforms to courses with high failure rates, and much more. |
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A Story of Possibilities: Blue Ridge Community College Student Shares Education Journey After Prison Hannah McClellan and Emily Thomas, EdNC SHARE: Facebook • Twitter In 2014, Paralee Cox received a 60-month federal prison sentence for drug-related charges. Fast forward eight years and she is just days away from walking the stage as a Blue Ridge Community College graduate. For the past year, North Carolina community colleges have been making significant adjustments to the way they serve adult learners—learners like Cox with multiple hurdles to overcome. |
The Top Federal Higher Ed Policymaker Speaks Doug Lederman, The Key With Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Student loan debt forgiveness. Free community college. Pell Grants for short-term programs. They represent some of the key higher education issues occupying the federal policy landscape in Washington. The U.S. Department of Education's James Kvaal weighs in on the Biden administration’s current thinking about these and other education-related topics, including the challenges of operating in a highly partisan era. |
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| This University Piloted Test-Optional Admissions. That Didn’t Last. Chelsea Long, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Last year, the University of Tennessee at Knoxville announced plans to continue a pilot program that let prospective students choose whether to submit standardized-test scores—a common COVID-era accommodation across higher ed. Less than a year later, Tennessee’s test-optional pilot has ended—even though the university’s data suggest that it was benefiting the institution. |
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Black Women Carry Higher Student Debt. They Hope Forgiveness Can Ease the Burden. Claretta Bellamy, NBC News SHARE: Facebook • Twitter While the pause on federal student loan payments may be a sigh of relief for many borrowers, it is only a temporary solution. That's particularly true for Black student loan borrowers who are often forced to take on more debt to attend college. According to the Brookings Institution, Black borrowers’ reliance on loans to pay for college has contributed to the widening racial wealth gap. Four years after graduating, Black college graduates owe an average of $52,726; by comparison, white students owe an average of $28,006. |
Photo: Leroy SkalstadAn Aspiring Doctor Dreamed of Spelman. But Could She Afford to Go? Eric Hoover, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Taylor Richardson is a determined student with a 3.7 GPA. She had big dreams to go to Spelman College and nowhere else. The campus felt like home, where she was meant to be. To get there, Richardson would have to overcome two wealth gaps that play a large role in higher education. |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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