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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Haves and Have-Nots on COVID-19 Protection Kery Murakami, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter When classes resume at Purdue University’s campus in late August, many professors will be outfitted with special masks and give lectures to students from behind part of the mile of Plexiglas the institution has bought. But not all faculty members and students around the country will have the same amount of protection, including those at community colleges, historically Black colleges and universities, and minority-serving institutions. Their biggest worry: running out of basic supplies. |
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Heavy on Workforce Development Matthew Dembicki, Community College Daily SHARE: Facebook • Twitter A new report by a group of educators and policy thinkers argues that community colleges are in the best position to upskill and train millions of Americans who lost their jobs because of the coronavirus pandemic. The study calls on community colleges to position themselves as central players in their regional economies, suggesting they teach academic and technical skills, employ work-based learning, engage employers more, and integrate credit and noncredit education. |
In a Former Shopping Mall, Austin Community College Sees a New Way to Learn Natalie Schwartz, Education Dive SHARE: Facebook • Twitter At first glance, the former Highland Mall in Austin, Texas, looks like a typical shopping center. But visitors passing through the large glassy entrance on its west side are greeted by something else: an expansive learning center run by Austin Community College. |
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| Rising Inequality in a Crisis: The View From Baltimore Mark Trumbull, The Christian Science Monitor SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The coronavirus lockdowns have magnified inequalities in U.S. society—with higher unemployment rates among women, young workers, and those without a college degree. The gap looms especially large along racial lines, a fact now amplified by nationwide protests in support of the Black Lives Matter movement. While many people would like to see more government help, some people in cities like Baltimore are taking their own steps to ease economic burdens. |
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As Students Fill Summer Courses, Many Ask: Why Aren’t All Colleges Open in the Summers? Matt Krupnick, The Hechinger Report/PBS NewsHour SHARE: Facebook • Twitter With millions of Americans unemployed or reluctant to travel or socialize because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and even though most courses will be online, summer registrations at colleges nationwide appear to be booming. As more students fill summer courses, which speeds up degrees and saves students money, many are asking: Why aren’t all colleges open in the summers? Experts say it’s time to rethink a calendar that dates back to when students had to go home to help on the farm. |
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Colleges Brace for Steep Drop in International Enrollment this Fall Kirk Carapezza, WGBH News/PRI SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Hundreds of thousands of international college students sent home this spring are still stuck there because of travel and visa restrictions. Colleges, which were already losing enrollment because of the anti-immigrant political environment, are bracing for losing still more students this fall. |
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