Top Higher Education News for Wednesday
Lumina

Lumina Foundation is committed to increasing the proportion of Americans with high-quality degrees, certificates and other credentials to 60 percent by 2025.

January 29, 2025

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A New Era for Higher Ed?

Michael Horn and Jeff Selingo, Future U

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The month of January may very well set the stage for what becomes a year of reckoning for many colleges and universities, higher education observers say—one in which drastic changes will be required to make long-needed improvements.

 

This podcast delves into some of the issues likely to frame 2025, including infrastructure adjustments, reimagined degree programs, and what appears to be a new ultimatum for many struggling colleges: partner or perish.

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Penn State Faculty Fear the School Will Close Campuses Across the State. Officials Won’t Give Them a Straight Answer.

Wyatt Massey, Spotlight PA

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Penn State leaders are reportedly keeping mum about whether they may close some of the university’s Commonwealth campuses that enroll a more racially diverse group of people, a greater percentage of Pennsylvania residents, and more first-generation college students than its flagship at University Park.

 

At a recent Penn State Faculty Senate meeting, university officials did not directly answer employees’ questions about possible campus closures. Instead, they emphasized the importance of student success, downward-trending university enrollments, and Penn State’s ongoing academic program review.

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High School Students Get a Jump on College

Jon Marcus, Education Next

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Dual enrollment is an appealing innovation that enjoys bipartisan support from an array of organizations that want it to succeed. Parents and policymakers like the idea that earning credits in high school not only encourages students to go on to college but also reduces the time and cost. Meanwhile, colleges embrace dual enrollment as a way to offset an unprecedented drop-off in traditional enrollment. And students are grabbing on to the opportunity.

 

Perhaps it’s because dual enrollment has been so widely embraced and has grown so quickly, however, that the practice is attracting new and more skeptical scrutiny.

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Polarization Is Battering Campuses. Here Is How College Leaders Are Fighting Back.

Laura Spitalniak, Higher Ed Dive

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Historically, people have held colleges up as pillars of free inquiry, constructive discourse, and debate. But in an increasingly polarized era, campuses have become microcosms of the political divisions plaguing the country.

 

College presidents and other higher education experts provided insight during the annual conference of the American Association of Colleges and Universities on how to guide an institution through challenging times while upholding an open culture of free speech.

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Study: Skipping Dev Ed Increases Student Success

Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed

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Developmental education has come under scrutiny for delaying students’ academic attainment and overall degree progression. While the purpose of remedial courses is to prepare learners to succeed in more difficult courses, it can produce the opposite effect, discouraging learners from pursuing more advanced courses or pushing them to drop out.

 

A new analysis seems to confirm those conclusions, with researchers suggesting that placing students directly into college-level courses, rather than a more precise placement system, is key to learners’ success.

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Closing the Tech Opportunity Gap in Rural America

Ramona Schindelheim, Work in Progress

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Too often, wealth and talent tend to accumulate in cities, perpetuating the misconception that technology startups can’t be successful in small towns and communities. The Center on Rural Innovation is working to change this narrative.

 

In this interview, CORI's Matt Dunne explains how his organization's on-the-ground work with rural community leaders is creating local, place-based ecosystems that provide pathways and opportunities to a more equitable and inclusive national economy.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Degree in Hand, Jobs Out of Reach: Why Recent Grads Are Struggling in a Competitive Market

Nayeli Jaramillo-Plata, CNN

What’s Working: Colorado Has a New Climate-Jobs Coalition, as Trump Pulls Back on Green Energy

Tracy Ross and Tamara Chuang, The Colorado Sun

Fact Check: Did Gavin Newsom Really Help Create 625,000 New Job Opportunities in California?

Adam Echelman, CalMatters

Views: Student-Centered Design: The Difference Between Success and a Scam

Scott Pulsipher, Forbes

EQUITY IN EDUCATION

Alleged Racial Inequity in Georgia HBCU Presidential Search

Shaun Harper, Resident Scholar Blog

Florida Educators, Students Speak Out Against Curriculum Changes

Kiara Alfonseca, ABC News

Kim Reynolds Issues Reminder to Iowa Public Universities to Comply With DEI Prohibition

Kyle Werner, Des Moines Register

The CRT Debate Is Back at the Indiana Statehouse, But This Time, It's DEI

Kayla Dwyer, Indianapolis Star

'The People Spoke': Oklahoma Lawmaker Aims to Codify Higher Education DEI Ban

Thomas Ferguson, KOKH

Extremist or Promising? Reaction to Ohio’s ‘Anti-DEI’ Bill in College Campuses Varies

Eileen McClory, London Bishop, and Avery Kreemer, Dayton Daily News

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Study Reveals Key Factors Driving Student College Choice in 2025

Walter Hudson, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

Texas A&M University to Restrict Undergrad Enrollment Growth Following ‘Massive’ Increases

Ben Unglesbee, Higher Ed Dive

Cal State System Braces for Possible Cuts in Classes, Sports Due to Budget Problems and Enrollment Drops

Amy DiPierro and Michael Burke, EdSource

How College Freshman Fall 2024 Enrollment Increased

Sarah Wood, U.S. News & World Report

COLLEGE AFFORDABILITY

Wisconsin College Turns to Digital Textbooks for Savings, Accessibility

Audrey Korte, The Chippewa Herald

Opinion: A Four-Year Degree at a Quarter of the Cost? Yes, It's Possible

Eric Leshinski, AZ Central

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Webinar: Building a Stronger Future: Celebrating Progress in Education Attainment

Lumina Foundation

How Test-Optional Policies in College Admissions Disproportionately Harm High-Achieving Applicants From Disadvantaged Backgrounds

National Bureau of Economic Research

Why Students Pick the Schools They Do

EAB

Webinar: The Knowledge Revival

American Enterprise Institute

luminafoundation.org
Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

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