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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Photo: The ChronicleWhy Doomsday Hasn’t Happened Lee Gardner, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Last spring, many college leaders, pundits, and observers expected most colleges to endure a doomsday scenario—plunges in enrollment and tuition revenue—in the fall. But the sky didn’t fall, at least not on everyone. As in the broader society, the pandemic disproportionately affected lower-income and minority communities. Community colleges saw enrollments drop steeply. But many four-year institutions lost relatively few students. State tax bases proved more resilient than expected. While the pandemic has had a significant and likely lasting impact on colleges, it hasn’t proved to be the financial disaster widely anticipated a year ago. |
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How to Reach Adult Students? For Starters, Talk to Them Like Adults Wendy Sedlak, Lumina Foundation SHARE: Facebook • Twitter To date, 45 states have set college attainment goals, and adult students are key to reaching those goals. So understanding the needs of adults and how they differ from students right out of high school is essential. Today, we have some fresh insights. A newly released Mathematica study draws on data from its four-year evaluation of Adult Promise Programs. Currently underway in 15 states, these programs offer enhanced financial assistance and other key supports for adult students who want to keep learning and increasing their earning power. |
Community College Goes Viral on TikTok Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter A recent 13-second TikTok video produced for Cape Fear Community College has 95,000-plus views, 6,000 likes, and 130 comments. And that’s not even the college's most-watched post. One video on community college stigma garnered more than a million views in September 2020, two months after the college started its TikTok account. Cape Fear isn't the only community college to branch into TikTok. Community College of Philadelphia, Calhoun Community College in Alabama, and Northern Virginia Community College are using the social media platform as one of several strategies to engage prospective students and potentially make up for enrollment losses caused by the pandemic. |
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| Photo: Kate FlockColleges Come Under Closer Scrutiny for Holding Transcripts Hostage Over Unpaid Bills Jon Marcus and Kirk Carapezza, The Hechinger Report/GBH News SHARE: Facebook • Twitter James Smith missed his final housing payment to the University of Massachusetts Amherst when he spent a year there as an exchange student on his way to a degree from the University of Minnesota. He offered to pay the balance as soon as he could. But after collection fees and other charges were added, he gave up. The university then blocked him from obtaining his academic transcript. Academic transcripts, which students need to get jobs, transfer, or go on to graduate school, are almost universally withheld over unpaid bills, sometimes for very small amounts. A few colleges and universities are now changing that practice. |
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Kudos for Their Use of Federal Relief Funds Matthew Dembicki, Community College Daily SHARE: Facebook • Twitter In announcing a new round of federal emergency grants to higher education institutions this week, the U.S. Education Department also gave props to how some colleges and universities are using previous relief funds. For example, Grand Rapids Community College in Michigan provided more than 630 loaner laptops, about 400 internet hotspots, and other equipment during the pandemic. Some institutions used the relief funding to retain and reengage students. Foothills-De Anza Community College in California established a Mental Wellness Ambassador program to promote mental health services. |
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Can California Make the Post-COVID Economy More Equal? Jackie Botts, CalMatters SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Aleida Ramirez exemplifies the acute challenges facing low-wage single mothers. To support her 21-year-old nephew and 11-year-old daughter, she worked as a restaurant manager, in a lice clinic, and as an Uber driver before the pandemic decimated her jobs. She quickly burned through her savings to cover rent. The plight of Ramirez took center stage this week during a CalMatters and Milken Institute event where experts explored the economic disparities highlighted by the pandemic and how state policies can foster a more equitable post-COVID future of work in California. |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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