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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After Lull, Employers Renew Interest in Helping Workers Repay Student Debt Danielle Douglas-Gabriel, The Washington Post SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Employers are heeding the call of younger workers for help with their education debt, and taking advantage of a new tax break born out of the pandemic. Still, there are more firms considering the perk than actually implementing it, a reluctance experts say is rooted in uncertainty about federal policies on debt cancellation and repayment. |
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Hawaii Fortifies Its Economy by Supporting Post-High School Learning for Native Hawaiians, Pacific Islander, and Filipinos Amanda DeLaRosa, Lumina Foundation SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The University of Hawaii is Lumina Foundation’s sixth Talent, Innovation, and Equity (TIE) partner, awarding a $575,000 grant to pursue strategies to generate a 5-percentage point increase in attainment for Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, and Filipino students in four years. Currently, these learners earn a credential of value at half the state's average rate. The TIE partnership signals that investing in native and indigenous communities through higher education is not only a moral imperative—but an urgent one, too. |
Photo: Irfan Khan/Los Angeles TimesSome California Colleges Find It Hard to Shift Away From Remedial Courses Matt Krupnick, The Hechinger Report/Los Angeles Times SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Despite a 2017 California law that requires community colleges to direct students away from remedial education, more than half of the state's 116 campuses have yet to embrace the change. Advocates who want to largely do away with remedial education in California and in a handful of other states say many students can handle college-level work if given the opportunity, especially when they get help from tutors or supplemental classes. |
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| A Federal Watchdog Said OPMs Need More Oversight. Here’s How That Will Affect Colleges and Companies. Natalie Schwartz, Higher Ed Dive SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Hundreds of colleges have contracts with online program management companies (OPMs), including top-ranked schools like the University of Southern California. But the proliferation of OPMs is stoking concerns among some lawmakers, who worry these deals drive up the price of online education and don’t comply with federal law. |
Study: Parent PLUS Loans Increase Racial Debt Burdens Meghan Brink, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter While Parent PLUS loans can open doors for children, they close many doors for the parents who hold them. Black parents are disproportionately burdened by Parent PLUS borrowing, a new study finds, leading to deeper racial inequities in student loan borrowing and higher education at large. |
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Photo: Christina House/Los Angeles TimesAsian Americans Are Typecast as Successful Students, But New Report Finds Troubling Gaps Teresa Watanabe, Los Angeles Times SHARE: Facebook • Twitter A new report says Asian Americans are often seen as successful students, but the stereotype masks “incredibly disconcerting” gaps in college outcomes among the multiple ethnic groups who make up the larger community in California. The 95-page report details other stark differences in academic achievement, including qualification for the University of California and California State University admission, completion of community college degree or certificate programs, and attainment of bachelor’s degrees. |
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