Top stories in higher ed for Tuesday
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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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Terrified, Elated, Anxious Julie Vitkovskaya and Susan Svrluga, The Washington Post SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The nation’s 17 million college students have confronted a new and chaotic reality on campus this fall: a fast-changing legal landscape and entirely new norms in the wake of the Dobbs decision on abortion. For some, the changes are joyful, a protection of human life. For others, they are terrifying, pushing them to consider scenarios that would have been unthinkable just months ago, such as having to drop out of school if they became pregnant. |
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Photo: Vanessa LeroyAs Enrollment Falls and Public Skepticism Grows, Some Colleges Are Cutting Their Prices Jon Marcus, The Hechinger Report SHARE: Facebook • Twitter As enrollment erodes and public skepticism mounts about the need for a college degree, the pace of annual increases in tuition and fees—which for years rose three times faster than the cost of everything else—has for the first time since the early 1980s slowed to a rate that’s well below inflation. Now some higher education institutions are starting to lower their prices. |
Formerly Incarcerated Students Can Now Zoom Back Into Prison to Finish Their Degrees Anna Savchenko, WBEZ SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Maria Garza and her classmates are all enrolled in Northwestern University’s Prison Education Program. Garza, however, is the only one zooming in from the outside. The number of incarcerated people in degree programs is low. But as the Illinois Department of Corrections seeks to increase opportunities for higher education behind bars, it's having to figure out how to allow students like Garza to complete their education even when they’re released from prison in the middle of a semester or degree program. |
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| Illustration: Sara Ariel WongAs Harvard Defends Admissions Process to the Supreme Court, We Explore Legacy Preferences for College Applicants Tiziana Dearing and Andrea Perdomo-Hernandez, WBUR SHARE: Facebook • Twitter As the U.S. Supreme Court looks into affirmative action and what constitutes fair admissions, another admissions practice is increasingly coming under fire: legacy admissions. James Murphy of Education Reform Now and Elie Mystal, a justice correspondent at The Nation, take a deep dive into the legacy consideration for college applicants and how it has become a target in the conversation about equity in higher education. |
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How Increased Federal Funding Impacts Tribal Colleges and Universities Sequoia Carrillo, WFAE SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Tribal Colleges and Universities do much more than provide an education or create a sense of belonging for Native American students. They also revitalize languages, preserve cultural knowledge, and help feed local families. For decades, TCUs have fought for more federal funding. Now, a new study finds that even modest investments by the federal government can have a huge impact for students and their surrounding communities. |
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A Campaign Fosters Faster Route to Degrees Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Martine Howard, a scholar at Camden County College, used her dissertation as an opportunity to get students to take more credits and graduate faster. The approach, a “15 to Finish” campaign, has fans and critics. |
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