Top stories in higher ed for Monday
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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: James BernalA Surprising Reason Keeping Students From Finishing College: A Lack of Transportation Charlotte West, The Hechinger Report SHARE: Facebook • Twitter At a time when colleges are increasingly focused on how to get and keep students enrolled and on a path to a degree, some of the most surprising challenges are not academic but logistical. Something as simple as affordable, reliable transportation can mean the difference between a student finishing college or not. |
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APLU Report Calls for Innovation and Flexibility in Student Programming Laura Spitalniak, Higher Ed Dive SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Colleges should focus on partnerships, flexibility, and innovation if they hope to set students up for lifelong learning and employment post-graduation, says a recent report from the Association of Public and Land-Grant Universities. The report's findings indicate that many students need the option to train for short-term job opportunities while earning credit for a longer-term degree. Others have skills from prior work experiences that the report argues should be recognized with college credit. |
With Standardized Testing Out, UC Explores Next Steps in Making Admissions More Equitable Michael Burke, KQED SHARE: Facebook • Twitter The University of California’s historic move to abandon standardized exams may not be the last of changes coming to the admissions process for the public university system. College access advocates say other ways to make admissions more equitable include working more closely with K-12 schools to better understand their applicants and possibly guaranteeing admission to more students who meet certain criteria. |
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| Podcast: How Colleges Can Revive Climate Goals Scott Carlson, The Evolving Campus SHARE: Facebook • Twitter “Sustainability” may not have the buzz of 2008, but it’s re-emerging in institutional risk management, and higher ed has a responsibility to experiment—and team up with local communities. On this podcast, higher ed leaders discuss how sustainability has evolved in recent years and the collaborations and partnerships that colleges can pursue to tackle sustainability projects. |
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‘Enough Is Enough’ Alexis Gravely, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Perhaps no one is more vocal on issues related to college affordability than Senator Elizabeth Warren, who says that student loan debt, at its core, is an economic equality issue. In an exclusive interview with Inside Higher Ed, she explains why. |
Federal Relief Money Boosted Community Colleges, But Now It’s Going Away Steven Yoder, NBC News/The Hechinger Report SHARE: Facebook • Twitter Chronically starved for resources, community colleges have used federal emergency funds to help more students keep going and graduate. That includes investments in mentoring, case management, emergency financial grants, and other support services. What happens when the money is gone? |
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