Top Higher Education News 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.

November 6, 2024

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Trump Is Poised to Retake the Presidency. Here’s How Election Day Played Out on Campuses.

Declan Bradley, Sarah Brown, Amanda Friedman, Garrett Shanley, and Andy Thomason, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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Former President Donald J. Trump appeared poised to retake the Oval Office early Wednesday, a possibility sure to stir panic throughout much of higher education. The Republican candidate campaigned on promises to wield the executive branch more aggressively against people and institutions doing things he doesn’t like, including colleges.

 

Early Wednesday, the Associated Press called victories for Trump in three of the seven key swing states: Pennsylvania, Georgia, and North Carolina, leaving Vice President Kamala Harris with virtually no path to 270 electoral votes.

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This Woman-Owned Manufacturing Company Is Proving the Chip Industry Is Open to All

Ramona Schindelheim, WorkingNation

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A small company in Medford, Oregon, is making a name for itself—expanding and creating jobs—as the United States ramps up to claim a bigger share of the global chip manufacturing industry.

 

Rogue Valley Microdevices is the first woman-owned, minority-owned business to be awarded millions in CHIPS Act funding. Its founder and CEO, Jessica Gomez, is determined to attract women and people of color to these new jobs, using herself as proof that a career in this industry is more accessible than many people may believe.

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We Need to Do More to Get Students Ready for College

Anne Kim, The Chronicle Review

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Fifteen years ago, a broad coalition of foundations, nonprofits, and educators launched a bold effort to reform the vast system of college remedial education that was destroying the higher-education opportunities of millions of students.

 

Today, this work remains unfinished—the victim of inertia, lack of resources, and competing priorities. Yet it is more important than ever to reinvigorate reform, and there are clear steps campuses can take to break the logjam.

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Tennessee Promise Scholarship Sees Record Participation

Adam Tamburin, Axios

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It has been a record year for Tennessee Promise, Tennessee's scholarship that sends students to community or technical college tuition-free. A total of 67,593 high school seniors applied to participate in the program this year, setting a new high water mark for the effort. At this time last year, 66,939 students had applied.

 

Tennessee launched its program in 2015, making it the first statewide scholarship of its kind for community and technical colleges. The effort quickly became part of a national movement on college access and affordability, with more than 30 states now offering a version of tuition-free community college.

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Prospective Student Veterans Face Complex Choices on the Journey to a Bachelor’s Degree

Daniel Braun, Michael Fried, and Emily Schwartz, Ithaka S+R

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As Veteran’s Day approaches, there is renewed attention paid to those individuals who have served in our nation’s military and to the ways our nation repays that service. Many military service members often cite education benefits as one of their primary motivations for joining the military.

 

However, once they leave the service, many veterans are not making best use of those benefits due to "undermatching," whereby students attend institutions where they are far less likely to graduate.

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Cash-Strapped Colleges Are Selling Their Prized Art and Mansions

Amanda Albright and Lily Meier, Bloomberg

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Scores of small, often little-known private colleges across the United States are facing a harsh new reality: selling off prized assets, such as housing complexes, presidential mansions, apartments, and even some paintings, in order to receive an injection of cash and, for the most vulnerable, stave off financial collapse.

 

Squeezed by a steady decline in the national birth rate that’s shrinking the pool of college applicants, the schools are struggling to fill classrooms and cover costs. Not all sales indicate a school is in financial distress, but it’s telling that schools are taking stock of what they can sell.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Video: Will AI Replace Human Workers?

Perry Russom, ABC News

Idaho Gained Nurses. But Not Enough to Deal With Retirements and Population Boom.

Kyle Pfannenstiel, Idaho Capital Sun

Skills for Success Brings Training to Businesses and Workers Across Alabama

Jennifer Williams, Business Alabama Magazine

Why More Academic Institutions Are Now Betting on the Trades

Mark C. Perna, Forbes

Tapping Low-Cost VR to Boost Student Learning

Madeline Patton, Community College Daily

Commentary: Why Grade Inflation Is Spreading From High School to College—and How It Hurts Learning

Karen Klein, Los Angeles Times

RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY

Amid Protests, Iowa Regents Begin Messy Process of Rooting Out DEI

J. Brian Charles, The Chronicle of Higher Education

Jacksonville Program Aims to Boost Black Male Teachers

Trimmel Gomes, Public News Service

The New Generation of Foundation Leaders Is Younger and More Diverse

Alex Daniels, The Chronicle of Philanthropy

Opinion: Thousands of Dreamers in Sonoma County Await While the Courts Decide Their Future

Christopher Kerosky, La Prensa Sonoma

Perspective: I’m a Detroit College Student Who Uses a Wheelchair. Here’s How I’m Navigating Campus Life.

Torrance Johnson, Chalkbeat Detroit

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Pennsylvania Colleges Are Trying to Grow Their Out-of-State Enrollments

Maddie Aiken, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

This New Admissions System Changes How Students Get Into College—and Helps Schools Find Prospects

Nanette Asimov, San Francisco Chronicle

Enrollment Increases at Most Mississippi Universities But Three Campuses See Decreases

The Associated Press

Cal State System Pilots New Direct Admissions Programs

Mallika Seshadri, EdSource

Views: Is the ‘College for All’ Movement Ending?

Ben Wildavsky and Richard Whitmire, Inside Higher Ed

AFFORDABILITY

States Are Taking on Fewer College Costs. Who Is Picking Up the Bill?

Ben Unglesbee, Higher Ed Dive

Wary of Student Debt, a New Generation Tests Whether Skilled Trades Pay Off

Mike Vogel, Florida Trend

Washington Public College Tuition Is Declining. Here’s Why

Jessica Fu, The Seattle Times

Providing Tuition Assistance to Native American Students

Jayla Moody Marshall, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

Millions of Student-Loan Borrowers Are Waiting for Broad Debt Cancellation. The Next President Won't Have Any Immediate Answers.

Ayelet Sheffey, Business Insider

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

A Progressive Vision for Education in the 21st Century

Center for American Progress

Women Community College Presidents

American Association of Community Colleges and the TIAA Institute

Webinar: Meeting Workforce Demand With Stackable Industry-Recognized Credentials

Tosa by Isograd

Webinar: Simplifying the Transfer Process

The Hunt Institute

Webinar: Recruiting Graduate and Adult Students in 2025

EAB

Webinar: Survey of Community College Outcomes: 2024 Results and the Future of the Survey

Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond

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Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

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