Top stories in higher ed for Tuesday
To view this email as a web page, click here. |
|
---|
| Lumina Foundation is committed to increasing the proportion of Americans with high-quality degrees, certificates and other credentials to 60 percent by 2025. |
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
Lots of Questions, Few Answers for Black and Brown High Schoolers Applying to College Lisa Philip, WBEZ Chicago SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Izzy Cervantes, 17, faces challenges many white college applicants do not. Her parents grew up in Puerto Rico and Mexico and are not familiar with college applications and financial aid here. At Ohio State, her top pick, just one in 20 students is Hispanic. More than seven out of 10 are white. And this year, Cervantes is confronting a new source of anxiety: a Supreme Court ruling released in late June with potentially huge implications for students of color. |
AI Detection Tools Falsely Accuse International Students of Cheating Tara García Mathewson, The Markup SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Turnitin is a software used by more than 16,000 academic institutions across the globe to spot plagiarized text and, since April, to flag AI-generated writing. But is it reliable and fair? Some higher ed watchers have their doubts. They believe international students are having their writing incorrectly flagged as AI-generated. Now, new research reveals why: AI detectors are "inherently biased" against non-native English speakers. |
Illustration: Thomas FuchsA New FAFSA Form Is Coming, Along With Changes in College Aid Ann Carrns, The New York Times SHARE: Facebook • Twitter A long-awaited, supposedly user-friendly version of the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) form will be unveiled for the 2024-25 school year. Along with updating the form, the federal government is expanding eligibility for federal aid in the biggest overhaul in decades. But some families with more than one child in college at the same time may qualify for less assistance. That’s because the overhaul also tweaked the form’s underlying aid formula, effectively eliminating a “sibling discount.” |
|
---|
|
| Illustration: The ChronicleWhy Is West Virginia U. Making Sweeping Cuts? Dan Bauman, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The roots of West Virginia University’s unprecedented proposed cuts to programs and departments run deep. They include external forces like the pandemic, declines in state appropriations, demographic trends, and budget battles at the federal level. But they are also the result of internal choices and miscalculations like debt-fueled spending on buildings and, most crucially, the big bet by university leaders on enrollment growth that didn’t pay off. |
|
---|
Photo: Bill O'Leary‘This Is a Calling’: Two HBCUs in the Nation’s Capital Get New Presidents Nick Anderson, The Washington Post SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Two 53-year-old academic leaders are taking the helm this summer at the two Historically Black Universities in the nation’s capital. One is a newcomer to the world of HBCUs, the other a product of them. Ben Vinson III, who starts Sept. 1 as president of Howard University, and Maurice Edington, who took office Aug. 1 as president of the University of the District of Columbia, discuss their goals and challenges ahead in this interview. |
|
---|
‘You Could Almost Define Everything We Do in California as Green Jobs’ Laura Aka, WorkingNation SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The fabric of the economy is becoming greener by the day—and no where is this more apparent than in California. Community college leaders, employers, and policymakers are poised to take advantage of the state's emerging green technologies by investing heavily in training programs and formats that support the critical reskilling and redeployment of the area's workforce. |
|
---|
|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|