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. |
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
More Colleges Are Resetting Tuition. Does the Strategy Work? Danielle McLean, Higher Ed Dive SHARE: Facebook • Twitter As more colleges take the tuition reset plunge, questions around the effectiveness of the strategy remain. Some see immediate and long-term benefits from the practice, with surging enrollments and applications. But for many institutions, that growth tapers off in a few years. Plus, the tuition resets are often not enough to produce any real change in their balance sheets. |
|
---|
Photo: Mattia BalsaminiPenn Demoted Her. Then She Won the Nobel Prize. Megan Zahneis, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter It’s somewhere between a Cinderella story and a “so there” to the academic-science establishment. Decades ago, the University of Pennsylvania demoted Katalin Karikó and told her she wasn’t “faculty quality” after her research failed to secure funding. Last week, that same research—which paved the way for COVID-19 vaccines—won her a Nobel Prize. |
College Students Are Hungry to Learn Everywhere Sara Goldrick-Rabb, Diverse Issues in Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Food insecurity and homelessness affect students everywhere, at all types of colleges and universities. Despite federal and state financial aid, 23 percent of undergraduates—an estimated 4 million students nationally—lack the resources to afford adequate food on a regular basis. Yet in too many places, the best students can hope for is a campus food pantry. The basic needs challenge demands a much more comprehensive and effective approach from higher education leaders and policymakers at all levels, writes anti-poverty scholar and activist Sara Goldrick-Rabb in this essay. |
|
---|
| Photo: Demetrius FreemanRollout of Biden’s New Student Loan Repayment Plan Hits Early Snags Danielle Douglas-Gabriel, The Washington Post SHARE: Facebook • Twitter As student loan payments resume for many borrowers this month, Mary Ansell is discovering that her expected payments are completely wrong. She's not the only one. The issue is especially frustrating for people enrolled in a much-touted new repayment plan that the Biden administration says could save the typical borrower $1,000 a year. More than 4 million people have enrolled in the Saving on a Valuable Education program, which bases monthly bills on income and family size. |
|
---|
What You Need to Know About Student Loan Debt and Repayments Ashley Smith, EdSource SHARE: Facebook • Twitter This month, payments on student loan debt for millions of borrowers across the country restarted after the three-year pandemic pause. California has some of the lowest tuition rates in the nation, but the state’s residents carry higher-than-average student debt balances, risky graduate school debt, and a unique reliance on parent-held debt. A new guide offers guidance and information to help. |
Admissions Offices Deploy AI Liam Knox, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Since the launch of ChatGPT last November, college admissions officers have been wringing their hands over the impact of generative artificial intelligence on college applications. But the counselors reading those applications are increasingly using AI, too—a move that raises new possibilities and ethical concerns. |
|
---|
|
|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|
|
---|