Top Higher Education News for Tuesday
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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.

October 15, 2024

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Tribal College Campuses Are Falling Apart. The US Hasn’t Fulfilled Its Promise to Fund the Schools.

Matt Krupnick, ProPublica

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In the 1970s, Congress made a commitment to fund a higher education system for Indigenous communities. But a walk through Little Big Horn College in Montana with Emerson Bull Chief, the school's dean of academics, shows just how far that idea has to go before becoming a reality.

 

The absence of resources leaves campuses without money for repairs to foundations, roofs, electrical systems, and water pipes. The colleges often lack funds to update academic programs and hire enough instructors. Many are the only colleges in the area.

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How Colleges Are Reaching Out to Often Overlooked Students From Rural Areas

Stephanie Sy, Rethinking College

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Students in rural communities graduate from high school above the national average. But when it comes to applying to college or getting their degree, these same students' attendance and completion rates are well below their peers in urban and suburban areas. 

 

A New Mexico initiative is helping to narrow that gap.

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Once Known for Death Row, San Quentin Hosts a Star-Studded Film Festival

Heather Knight, The New York Times

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The prizes are paper certificates. The red carpet measures just a few feet long. The catered lunch entails state-issued bologna sandwiches wrapped in plastic.

 

The first-ever San Quentin Film Festival, which took place in California’s oldest prison, may have lacked glamour and glitz. But the incarcerated men who screened their films could not have been more thrilled as they put their education and training in journalism, podcasting, filmmaking, and other pursuits on display. 

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Where the 2024 President Candidates Stand on Higher Education Issues

Natalie Schwartz, Laura Spitalniak, and Ben Unglesbee, Higher Ed Dive

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With the 2024 presidential election just weeks away, it’s become more clear how the candidates may approach key higher education issues, including accreditation, international enrollment, and student protests.

 

What follows is an overview of where Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump stand based on their statements, campaign websites, past actions, and their parties’ platforms. 

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Motivating Students Who Have Some College But No Credential

Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed

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Tens of millions of Americans have stopped out of college. According to the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, 36.8 million Americans under the age of 65 are part of the group with some college credits but no credential.

 

A new study explores what deters them from returning and what might bring them back.

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What One State Learned After a Decade of Free Community College

Jill Barshay, The Hechinger Report

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Communities around the country have been experimenting with free college programs since 2005, usually with private funding, but Tennessee was the first to make it a statewide policy. Thirty-six states have since followed Tennessee’s lead and offer some version of free tuition to residents.

 

However, as the number of free-tuition programs increases, so do the questions and doubts. Are low-income students benefiting? Is free tuition leading to more college graduates? Answers to these important questions are starting to emerge from Tennessee.

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Chancellor Greenstein Leaves Behind a Legacy of Changes at Pennsylvania’s State-Owned Universities

Maddie Aiken, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The Rising Importance of Continuing Education in Higher Ed

Michelle Giovannozzi and Shelly Chabon, The EvoLLLution

Arizona State U. Goes West

Dan Bauman, The Chronicle of Higher Education

Do Liberal Arts Colleges Pay Off? What the Data Say

Preston Cooper, American Enterprise Institute

Postsecondary Priorities: Pull of Career, Technical Education in Northeast Indiana

Ashley Sloboda, The Journal Gazette

RACIAL JUSTICE AND EQUITY

When DEI Is Gone: A Look at the Fallout at One Texas University

Kiara Alfonseca, ABC News

The New College President: What Can Diverse Leadership Teach Us?

Marybeth Gasman, Forbes

The Old—and New—Challenges Our HBCUs Face

Jabari Simama, Governing Magazine

As AI Takes the Helm of Decision Making, Signs of Perpetuating Historic Biases Emerge

Paige Gross, Georgia Recorder

FEDERAL POLICY

'Universities Are the Enemy': The Dark Belief Behind Project 2025’s Higher Education Agenda

Carrie N. Baker, Washington Monthly

Video: Paul Glastris on the 'State College Voter'

Tammy Thueringer, Washington Journal

As the Election Nears, Biden’s Student Debt Agenda Is in Tatters. Will It Hurt Harris?

Zachary Schermele, USA Today

STATE POLICY

1 in 4 Students Nixes a College Based on State Politics, Survey Shows

Jessica Blake, Inside Higher Ed

Budget Cuts Could Threaten Louisiana's Early Ed, Dual Enrollment Programs, Officials Warn

Elyse Carmosino, NOLA

Proposition 486: Should Maricopa Community Colleges Spending Limit Increase?

Helen Rummel, Arizona Republic

Commentary: With Higher Ed Facing Challenges, New Jersey's Community Colleges Provide Solutions

Aaron Fichtner, Maria Heidkamp, and Michael Gorman, The Star-Ledger

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Politics, Policies, and Student Perspective: It Wasn’t a Fluke!

Art & Science Group

Virtual Forum: Microcredentials’ Macro-Potential

The Chronicle of Higher Education

Webcast: Supporting Student Success: Case Studies in Making College More Affordable

Inside Higher Ed

Using Supportive Services to Advance Community College Equity Goals

Urban Institute

Webinar: Youth in Teacher Apprenticeship Pathways: How to 'TAP' Into Youth in the Education Sector

New America

Generative AI, the American Worker, and the Future of Work

Brookings Institution

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Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

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