Top Higher Education News for Friday
Lumina Foundation is committed to increasing the proportion of Americans with high-quality degrees, certificates and other credentials to 60 percent by 2025. | Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed SHARE: Facebook • LinkedIn Career readiness is a growing undercurrent in higher education—driven in part by outside pressure from families and students to provide a return on investment for the high costs of tuition—but also pushed by an evolving job market and employers who attribute less weight to a college major or degree for early talent hiring. But with a fraction of students engaging with the career center on campus, delivering career development and professional skills to all students can seem like an impossible task. Enter the career champion. | Mikhail Zinshteyn, CalMatters SHARE: Facebook • LinkedIn Fewer California high school students are completing federal financial aid applications. According to recent data, the number of seniors completing the Free Application for Federal Student Aid has dropped by about 48,000 students, or 25 percent, compared to this time last year. Some analysts say it is a sign that students may fear the Trump administration will use their sensitive data for immigration enforcement. | Cory Turner and Jonaki Mehta, NPR SHARE: Facebook • LinkedIn In a confirmation hearing that was heated at times and interrupted repeatedly by the shouts of protesters, Secretary of Education nominee Linda McMahon was grilled by committee Democrats about the White House's plans to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education. The fact that the Trump administration has already begun cutting department staff and programs made yesterday's hearing less a referendum on McMahon's views or her qualifications—she is arguably one of President Trump's least controversial Cabinet nominees—and more a referendum on Trump's stated plans. | Evan Castillo, BestColleges SHARE: Facebook • LinkedIn Over the past 15 years, college attainment across all racial and ethnic groups has increased. Still, states have more to do to support and educate students who are Black, Indigenous, and people of color. In this interview, Lumina Foundation's Courtney Brown discusses the barriers affecting degree attainment for BIPOC populations and how some states, through strategic investments and thoughtful policies, are breaking down those barriers to ensure pathways to success. | Jeremy Bauer-Wolf, New America SHARE: Facebook • LinkedIn The U.S. Department of Education administers billions of dollars in federal Pell Grants and student loans, which help vulnerable populations attend college and ascend the social mobility ladder. The department monitors colleges that accept federal aid to ensure they don’t hawk junk degrees that lead to poor-paying jobs. It also investigates when colleges that receive federal financial aid discriminate against students for their race, sex, or disability. Now, the department’s future is on the line. The following stories illustrate what's at stake. | Sharon Otterman, Anemona Hartocollis, and Dana Goldstein, The New York Times SHARE: Facebook • LinkedIn Around the country, dozens of universities and colleges have begun to scrub websites and change programming in response to the Trump administration's widening crusade against diversity, equity, and inclusion. But much remains unclear about the legality and reach of President Trump’s new orders. So some schools are simply watching and waiting. | Eileen Strempel and Stephen J. Handel, Times Higher Education | John Fritz, The EvoLLLution | Brooklyn Draisey, Iowa Capital Dispatch | Sheridan Hendrix, Columbus Dispatch |
Steven Mintz, Higher Ed Gamma | Charlotte Alden, Cascadia Daily News |
Thomas Costello, Asbury Park Press | Sarah Wood, U.S. News & World Report |
Logan Hanson, Milwaukee Business Journal | Nick Fouriezos, The Daily Yonder | Jay Ruderman, Diverse Issues in Higher Education | Student Borrower Protection Center | |