Top Higher Education News for Thursday
Lumina

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

October 10, 2024

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TOP STORIES

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How Colleges Are Bridging FAFSA Filing Gaps

Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed

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Financial stress is one of the top reasons students stop out of college, and recent challenges with the Free Application for Federal Student Aid may have exacerbated the issue. 

 

To mitigate these obstacles, college and university leaders are thinking outside the box with proactive strategies that ensure students have equitable access and better support to complete the FAFSA this year. 

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Non-Degree Credentials Are Great Tools, But Some Need Sharpening

Jamie Merisotis, Forbes

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Given the nation’s pressing workforce demands—notably in industries such as health care, logistics, and information technology—the growth of certificate programs is a welcome development. In fact, the nation can’t reach its educational attainment goals without them.

 

However, as non-degree credentials emerge as part of the “new normal” for learning beyond high school, we must insist that they be better at delivering value. And it’s clear that many actors must play a role in making this happen, including employers, states, accreditors, and others, says Lumina Foundation's Jamie Merisotis in his latest column for Forbes.

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California Bans Universities From Giving Preference to Legacy Applicants

Scott Tong, WBUR

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California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a new bill into law last week banning the state’s private colleges from giving preference to legacy applicants, who are typically the children of alumni or donors. Supporters of the new law say the goal is to give more people access to higher education regardless of socioeconomic status.

 

Sophie Callcott—a legacy student at Stanford University who now advocates to ban the practice—talks about her reaction to the news in this interview.

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Manufacturing Has Made a Comeback, and Employers Say They Are Not Done Hiring. Do You Have the Skills They Want?

Ramona Schindelheim, Work in Progress

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Manufacturing jobs in the United States are coming back—and in a big way. Over the next decade, 3.8 million manufacturing jobs will likely be needed, and 1.9 million are expected to be unfilled.

 

What’s behind the resurgence in hiring? Carolyn Lee, president and executive director of The Manufacturing Institute, offers insight on this podcast.

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Here’s What Voters Want the Next President to Do for Higher Ed

Katherine Mangan, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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A recent survey by Jobs for the Future shows Republican and Democratic voters alike want politicians to establish alternative pathways to the middle class. It’s harder than it looks.

 

The results show that 84 percent of respondents say it is somewhat or very important for the next president, in the first 100 days, to expand apprenticeship programs and facilitate hiring based on skills rather than degrees.

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The Overlooked Demographic That Is a Huge Opportunity for Democrats

Paul Glastris, POLITICO

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A certain long-overlooked demographic is coming into focus as the 2024 presidential election draws near: the “state college voter.” These are Americans who, while college educated, didn’t leave home to attend elite colleges. Instead, they mostly studied at “regional public universities”: not the flagship state universities but unassuming institutions whose names have the word “State” in them.

 

Understanding who these voters are, what makes them tick, and how to reach out to them could make a difference in this razor-close election, predicts Washington Monthly's Paul Glastris in this perspective piece.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

The Fallout: University of the Arts Haunted by Unanswered Questions Months After Sudden Closure

Ben Unglesbee, Higher Ed Dive

How Early Care Apprenticeships Can Help Address California’s Dire Teacher Shortage

Randi Wolfe and Vince Stewart, CalMatters

How Many Credentials Are Students Earning?

Kent Phillippe, DataPoints

From Boulders to Rocks: How Microcredentials Can Transform Higher Education

Collin Sullivan, The EvoLLLution

RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY

One State’s Approach to DEI Legislation

Ed Finkel, Community College Daily

Some Schools Cut Paths to Calculus in the Name of Equity. One Group Takes the Opposite Approach

Javeria Salman, The Hechinger Report

California ‘Dreamer’ to Attend DACA Hearing That Could Determine Program’s Fate

Salvador Rivera, Border Report

America’s Censored Classrooms 2024

PEN America 

Oral Argument in the DACA Case: What Higher Education Leaders Need to Know

The Presidents' Alliance on Higher Education and Immigration

Opinion: Reducing Barriers Like Standardized Test Requirements Expands Access

Suzanne M. Rivera, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

How Utah's Higher Education Landscape Can Evolve to Meet a Future of Fewer Students

Logan Stefanich, KSL

Record-Busting Freshman Classes Boost Tri-Cities College Attendance. What’s Driving It

Eric Rosane, Tri-City Herald

Immigrant-Origin Students Are the Biggest Drivers of U.S. College-Enrollment Growth

Karin Fischer, Latitudes

State Report Says Seven Virginia Universities Should Be Monitored as Enrollment Cliff Approaches

Dwayne Yancey, Cardinal News

UNC System Enrollment Reached an All-Time High This Fall. Will the Trend Continue?

Korie Dean, The News & Observer

Why Are Advanced Placement Scores Suddenly So High?

Frederick M. Hess, American Enterprise Institute

STATE POLICY

Nevada Lawmakers Aim to Change Oversight of State’s Colleges

Jessica Blake, Inside Higher Ed

Higher Education Officials Name Oklahoma’s New Chancellor

Emma Murphy, Oklahoma Voice

Commentary: New Math Placement Rules Undermine Preparation of Community College STEM Majors

Richard Ford, EdSource

Views: Big Budget Cuts to Louisiana Higher Education Would Be Counterproductive

Council for a Better Louisiana

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Collaborating to Serve Adult Learners of Color: Lessons From the Partnerships for Adult Learner Success Initiative

Mathematica

AdvantAGE LA: A Blueprint for Employing, Retaining, and Advancing Older Workers Across Los Angeles

Workforce Development Board of Los Angeles

Students With Disabilities in Charter High Schools: Curriculum and
College Preparation

The Center for Learner Equity

Navigating Utah’s Demographic Dip: Strategically Positioning Utah Higher Education Amid College-Age Population Declines

Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute

Virtual Forum: The Year Ahead: Enrollment Issues and Solutions

The Chronicle of Higher Education

Virtual Event: How Are Black and Latino Men Faring After Developmental Education Reform?

Public Policy Institute of California

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

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