Top stories in higher ed for Wednesday
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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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Photo: Kate Medley‘One Flat Tire Away’: How a Rural Community College Makes Sure Its Students Get to Their Classes, One Car at a Time Sylvia Goodman, The Chronicle of Higher Education SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Megan Reid lives in the home she grew up in, with her mother, brother, and son. She has neighbors to either side, but otherwise, the home is surrounded by fields of corn and collard. Because of transportation and other challenges, college is a distant dream. But then Reid found out about Lenoir Community College’s Cars for College program, which helps to solve transportation challenges that students face in rural communities. For Reid, it made all the difference. |
Photo: Stefani ReynoldsCollege Admissions Is Already Broken. What Will Happen If Affirmative Action Is Banned? Liz Willen, The Hechinger Report SHARE: Facebook • Twitter College admissions is about to get even more complicated, with a major shake-up on the horizon that could forever change who gets in and why. The Supreme Court is poised to hear oral arguments in a case that could disrupt more than 40 years of legal precedent in how race and ethnicity are considered in college admissions. A new film offers a history lesson on understanding this highly fraught debate over fairness and meritocracy. |
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How HBCUs Recover From Bomb Threats Oyin Adedoyin, Race on Campus SHARE: Facebook • Twitter In February, bomb threats rippled through more than 50 Historically Black Colleges and Universities across the country. An FBI investigation found racial motivations behind the threats and identified six minors as persons of interest. The bureau is still investigating the cases. The threats eat away at university resources and take a toll on the campus community’s mental health. In this interview, administrators at Fayetteville State University and Coppin State University discuss how they’re using grant funding to recover. |
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| Photo: Dania MaxwellOverwhelming Demand for Online Classes Is Reshaping California’s Community Colleges Debbie Truong, Los Angeles Times SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Thousands of California community college students are changing the way they plan to pursue higher education by opting for online classes in eye-popping numbers. The demand for virtual classes represents a dramatic shift in how instruction is delivered in one of the nation’s largest systems of public higher education and stands as an unexpected legacy of the pandemic. |
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Photo: Corinne BoudreauxLatinos Will Make Up Nearly a Third of US Students in 2030. Will Schools Help Them Succeed? Kayla Jimenez, USA TODAY SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Latino students will make up nearly 30 percent of all public school enrollment by the end of the decade. How are schools preparing for them? In higher education, colleges are looking to attract more Latino students, especially as overall enrollment declines. Prospective and current college students say they are looking for more from these institutions, including additional help paying their tuition and other supports. |
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For Gen Z, 30 Years Is Far Too Late for an End to Hunger Shannon Maynard and Megan Rossiter, The Hill SHARE: Facebook • Twitter At last month’s White House Conference on Hunger, Food, and Nutrition, there was broad support among attendees for the administration’s proposals to improve affordability and access to nutritious food for children and seniors. But what about food insecurity among today's college students? How will the national strategy to end U.S. hunger by 2030 help them? |
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RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY |
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