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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How California Is Responding to Dire Student Housing Shortage Michael Burke, EdSource SHARE: Facebook • Twitter College students across California are on the verge of being homeless as rising rents exacerbate long standing shortages of student housing. The state is responding with plans for more on-campus dorms, and a new bill could make it easier for colleges to expand housing. Meanwhile, some students are turning to short-term solutions for relief, from living in vans near campus to sleeping in their cars overnight in campus parking lots. |
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The Biden Administration’s National Strategy on Hunger Is a Big Deal for College Students Chris Geary, New America SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The Biden administration’s newly announced National Strategy on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health provides a comprehensive set of actions that could meaningfully address food insecurity and improve national health outcomes. The strategy also highlights how food insecurity is a substantial problem for college students, and aims to address the challenge by permanently reforming SNAP—the largest federal nutrition assistance program—to better meet students' needs. |
Photo: Demetrius Freeman/The Washington PostLawsuit Aims to Stop Biden’s Student Loan Forgiveness Plan Danielle Douglas-Gabriel, The Washington Post SHARE: Facebook • Twitter A lawsuit seeking to block President Joe Biden’s plan to cancel some student debt claims the policy is not only illegal but could inflict harm on borrowers who in some states would be forced to pay taxes on the forgiven amount. The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana earlier this week, is the first significant legal action seeking to invalidate Biden’s policy before it takes effect. |
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| Photo: Matt Odom/NBC NewsWhy Aren’t Flagship Universities Enrolling More of Their Own States’ Black Students? Meredith Kolodner, The Hechinger Report/NBC News SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Among state flagship universities, the University of Georgia has one of the country’s largest disparities between its proportion of Black students and that of Black high school graduates from the state—second only to the University of Mississippi. Such racial disparities may be concentrated in the South, but they are pervasive throughout the country. |
Study: Teacher Licensing Exams Shrink Indiana’s Pool of Black, Hispanic Teachers Aleksandra Appleton, Chalkbeat Indiana SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Indiana’s teacher shortage—and especially its shortage of Black and Hispanic teachers—might be driven in part by its teacher licensing exam, according to a new report from Indiana University. The study calls for improvements to diversify the expert panels that determine passing scores for prospective educators, as well as more support for would-be test-takers. |
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How to Make Classes More Active, and Why It Matters Jeffrey R. Young, EdSurge SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Cathy Davidson has spent her career encouraging innovation in higher education. It’s not just about test scores and whether people learn, she argues, but there’s an ethical issue that sometimes gets lost in discussions about teaching. Davidson, a professor and co-author of the book, “The New College Classroom,” explains why colleges bear a responsibility to update teaching techniques to meet new demographics of students and the changing needs of the workforce in this interview. |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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