Top Higher Education News for Monday
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 21, 2024

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College Students Fight Barriers to Casting Ballots as Early Voting Begins

Matt Vasilogambros, Stateline

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Nearly 41 million Generation Z Americans are eligible to vote in November’s election. That large voting bloc could make the difference in an election that will likely be determined by small margins.

 

But voting laws differ by state, and access varies from campus to campus for the roughly 18 million students in undergraduate and graduate programs. Add the complexity of last-minute changes to election laws, including an increasing number of states implementing voter ID, and that confusion could hurt participation.

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Another Public Flagship May Cut Dozens of Majors

Amanda Friedman, The Chronicle of Higher Education

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Faculty members at the University of Connecticut worry that dozens of majors could face elimination as part of a review of low-enrollment programs—a process that began amid a significant budget deficit.

 

While a host of public regional universities have taken heavy hits to their academic offerings, what’s happening at UConn reflects that these financial struggles are not exclusive to smaller, less-resourced institutions.

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'The Most Important Thing Is to Understand You’re Not Alone'

Carmen Mendoza, Different Voices of Student Success

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Sometimes, all it takes to keep a student from giving up is just one person. One person who notices, cares, takes the time to connect, and knows how to marshal the college’s resources to help.

 

Harry Zarin, a counselor at Montgomery College in Maryland, became that person for Nicole Javitt during her freshman year.

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California Banned College Legacy Admissions. Will It Change Who Gets In?

Carolyn Jones, CalMatters

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When California banned private colleges from favoring the children of donors and alumni in the admissions process, it intended to help level the playing field for prospective students after the U.S. Supreme Court ended race-conscious admissions policies in June 2023.

 

But some college counselors question whether the ban will make much of a difference.

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Hispanic Doctors: Missing From Medicine

Alejandro Ravazzola, WorkingNation

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Hispanics are the second fastest-growing racial/ethnic group in the country. They're also less likely to have access to high-quality health care. Just six percent of U.S. doctors today are Hispanic, leaving many patients and communities struggling to find culturally competent care.

 

A new documentary takes a deep dive into the stories of first-generation Latinos who are overcoming barriers like low-income backgrounds, lack of mentorship, and fear of debt as they pursue their dreams of becoming doctors.

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What a Trump or Harris Win Could Mean for Student Loan Forgiveness

Solcyré Burga, Time Magazine

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Numerous lawsuits continue to stifle aspects of the Biden Administration's broader student loan forgiveness, leaving it in legal limbo.

 

While the judiciary wields significant power over the future of student loan debt relief, voters will soon have influence at the ballot box: Student loan forgiveness could be handled very differently depending on who the country elects as its next president. 

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

Bridging the Gap Between Education and Workforce

Bridget Golden, Beyond Transfer

Weber State University Preps Auto Techs for Dynamic Industry

Alex Gonzalez, Public News Service

Wayne State University Students and First-Time Voters Weigh In on the Upcoming Election

Carli Petrus, WXYZ

ACT, SAT Scores Decline Year Over Year

Kara Arundel, Higher Ed Dive

Opinion: New State Police Head Should Prioritize Higher Ed for Troopers

Reed Hillman, CommonWealth Beacon

STUDENT SUPPORTS

Adult Learners: Four Important Ways to Better Support Them

Constance St. Germain, University Business

Report: Best Practices in Re-Entry, Re-Integration of Formerly Incarcerated Students

Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed

Denver Auraria Campus Student Cooking Class Aims to Reduce Food Insecurity Stigma

Jason Gonzales, Chalkbeat Colorado

Undocumented Students at Stanislaus State Share Stories of Struggles, Ask for Support

Taylor Johnson, The Modesto Bee

CSU Creates a National Model for Supporting Student Parents

Angela Dennis, Diverse Issues in Higher Education

Southside Virginia Community Colleges Unite to Address Housing Shortage

Sarah Weitzman, WSET

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Dual Enrollment Courses Linked to College Success, Finds New Report

Michael T. Nietzel, Forbes

College Enrollment Up Across the Board in Bemidji, President Credits New Policies

Mathew Holding Eagle, MPR News

UNH First-Year Enrollment Remains Steady But Number of First-Gen Students Drop

Jeremy Margolis, Concord Monitor

Chicago Students Have Higher High School Graduation and College Enrollment Rates, Report Finds

Samantha Smylie and Reema Amin, Chalkbeat Chicago

Indiana Colleges See Higher Enrollment This Fall, Though Long-Term Declines Not Fully Reversed

Aubrey Wright, Indiana Public Media

STATE POLICY

University Leaders Urge State Oversight, Financial Support to Keep Colleges Afloat

Nikita Biryukov, New Jersey Monitor

Wilmington Approves $10 Million for Downtown Bracebridge Higher Education Hub

Sarah Petrowich, Delaware Public Media

Is Maryland’s New Higher Ed Privacy Law a Harbinger of Things to Come?

Will Sweeney, EdTech Magazine

Should More New York Veterans Get Tuition Help From the State? It's Up to Gov. Hochul Now

Amy Neff Roth, Utica Observer Dispatch

NEW PODCASTS

The Multibillion-Dollar Industry Getting Wealthy Kids Into the Ivies

The Wall Street Journal

Innovative Accreditation: Accelerated Degrees and Competency-Based Education

Changing Higher Ed

Voter Suppression and the Importance of Minoritized Youth Voting in the United States With Dr. Carol Anderson

In the Margins

The Rise of Microcredentials and the Policies Behind Them

Illumination by Modern Campus

Shaping Equity: John B. King, Jr. on Higher Education’s Role in Student Success

Higher Ed Spotlight

As the Job Market Changes, Is a College Degree Less of a ‘Meal Ticket’ Than in the Past?

EdSurge

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Daily Lumina News is edited by Patricia Brennan.

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