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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Is This College? Students and Professors Reflect on a 'Weird' First Week of Classes Jeffrey R. Young, EdSurge SHARE: Facebook • Twitter College classes are back in session around the country, or at least something that resembles them. At Purdue University, for instance, officials spent the summer installing five miles of plexiglass barriers in classrooms and other spaces on campus. They bought a million face masks. And they touted the "Protect Purdue Pledge" that everyone had to agree to. On this podcast, several professors and students describe their classes during the first week of this pandemic semester. |
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Her School Offered a Path to the Middle Class. Will COVID-19 Block It? Paul Tough, The New York Times SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Students at Richmond Hill, a public high school in central Queens, don’t come from privileged backgrounds. They are mostly immigrants or the children of immigrants. Eighty-two percent of them meet the federal definition of economic disadvantage, and 22 percent speak a language other than English at home. Bianca Argueta, a Richmond Hill graduate, aspired for something more when it came to college. Then the pandemic happened. |
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| The Rise Prize: Fostering Innovation to Support Student Parents Imaginable Futures SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The Rise Prize is designed to raise awareness about student parents—and to accelerate solutions that address their postsecondary success, economic mobility, and well-being. Using information from 300-plus Rise Prize applicants, a new report provides insight on solutions that currently exist—and opportunities that remain—to support and lift up student parents. |
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Campaign Focuses on Educator Experiences During COVID-19 Pandemic Sarah Wood, Diverse Issues in Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The Center for American Progress and EduColor have teamed up to launch the #WeBuildEDU campaign in an effort to discuss ways to reduce further learning disruptions during the COVID-19 pandemic. As part of the campaign, educators of color are detailing their experiences with school shutdowns at the start of the pandemic, discussing ways in which their teaching changed, and suggesting how schools might look to better serve all students moving forward. |
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