Top Higher Education News for Tuesday
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 29, 2024

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Report: Women, First-Gen, BIPOC Students Less Likely to Have Paid Internship Experience

Ashley Mowreader, Inside Higher Ed

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Internships can be a powerful vehicle for work-based learning and professional development for college students, but securing a paid internship is something only a fraction of students accomplish.

 

A September report from the Business-Higher Education Forum found there are not enough internships available for students who want them nationally, and a new brief from California Competes shows similar gaps among students at California public institutions.

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A College Partnership Saves a Newspaper, Helps a Rural Community, and Prepares Its Students for the Future

Graham Vyse and Dustin Chambers, Different Voices of Student Success

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When The Oglethorpe Echo, a now 151-year-old weekly newspaper, found itself on the brink of shutting down, William H. NeSmith, 72, stepped in with a plan to save it. Students from the University of Georgia’s Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication would report the news as part of their coursework, and the paper—along with all of Oglethorpe County—would become their learning laboratory.

 

Three years after NeSmith staged his intervention, the Echo is still rolling. Even more fundamentally, this partnership offers a template for how colleges can bolster all kinds of important institutions in their communities, not just newspapers—and find new ways to prepare students for the workforce in the process.

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Retooling Higher Education to Meet the Needs of Gen Z

Jamie Merisotis, Indianapolis Business Journal

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For Gen Z, college represents an opportunity to pivot from being defined by the traumatic events that shaped their childhoods—the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the Iraq and Afghan wars, the Great Recession, and the COVID-19 pandemic—to creating real change. These individuals are idealists—or as a McKinsey report calls them: socially progressive, “inclusive consumers.”

 

To create the changes they seek, they’ll need education. And against a rising tide of higher-ed skepticism over cost and economic outcomes, colleges and universities must define themselves with the authenticity and transparency this generation demands, writes Lumina Foundation's Jamie Merisotis in this op-ed.

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How America’s Youngest Voters Feel About Casting Their First Ballots

Karina Elwood, Susan Svrluga, and Hannah Natanson, The Washington Post

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As citizens vote to choose the nation’s 47th president, many will be exercising that right for the first time.

 

Some high school seniors and college freshmen—among the eight million newly eligible to vote this year—will be casting ballots at the same time as they’re taking classes about voting rights, elections, and democracy. These young voters could have a monumental impact on the 2024 presidential election, and research shows that what teens learn in class about voting plays a key role in determining if or how they show up to the polls.

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Fewer Black Men Are Enrolling in HBCUs. Here's Why and What's Being Done

Susan Shalhoub, Juana Summers, Jason Fuller, and Patrick Jarenwattananon, NPR

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The number of Black men enrolled at Historically Black Colleges and Universities is the lowest it's been since 1976. Black men now currently account for only 26 percent of the students at HBCUs—back in 1976, that figure was 38 percent.

 

In this interview, Calvin Hadley, assistant provost for academic partnerships and student engagement at Howard University, discusses what's lost when Black men don't attend HBCUs and how he is trying to close this gap.

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Dual Enrollment Has Exploded. But It’s Hard to Tell If It’s Helping More Kids Get a College Degree

Jill Barshay, The Hechinger Report

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Dual enrollment is exploding. During the 2022-23 school year, nearly 2.5 million high school students took college classes, simultaneously earning high school and college credits. That’s up from 1.5 million students in the fall of 2021 and roughly 300,000 students in the early 2000s. Figures released last week show that dual enrollment grew another seven percent in the fall of 2024 from a year earlier, even as the number of traditional college freshmen fell. 

 

But alongside this meteoric rise of students and resources, it’s not clear that an early taste of higher education encourages more students to go to college who wouldn’t have otherwise. And it’s still hard to tell if the credits are helping students get through college any faster. 

HUMAN WORK AND LEARNING

New Research Emphasizes Importance of College Proximity

Johanna Alonso, Inside Higher Ed

Case Study: A Partnership Between a Health System and Community College to Grow Their Local Health Care Workforce

Emily Thomas, EdNC

Fast Forward to 2034: In Higher Education, Colleges Will Meet Students Where They Are

Susan Shalhoub, Worcester Business Journal

After Controversy Over College Polling Sites, Tarrant County Students Work to Increase Turnout

Shomial Ahmad, Forth Worth Report

Evolving Higher Education to Meet Modern Students’ Changing Expectations

David Ferreira, The EvoLLLution

Colleges of Education Are Falling Behind on AI. Here’s How to Fix That

Matt Zalaznick, University Business

STUDENT SUPPORTS

OSU-OKC Program Empowers Students Overcoming Hardship to Pursue Higher Education

Sierra Pfeifer, KOSU

Why the Black Males in Engineering (BME) Project Is Powerful

Marybeth Gasman, Forbes

Survey: Student Success Administrators Optimistic

Colleen Flaherty, Inside Higher Ed

MU Counseling Center Launches Study to Evaluate Student Mental Health

Katie Grawitch, Columbia Missourian

University of Tennessee Has Seen Such Student Success, 200 Schools Are Coming to Learn How

Keenan Thomas, Knoxville News Sentinel

Rancho Santiago Community College District Provides Critical Support for Student Veterans

Jenelyn Russo, The Orange County Register

PRISON EDUCATION

Connecticut Expanding Higher Education Programs in Prisons. Here’s How Grants Are Making That Possible.

Erica Philips, Hartford Courant

Travis County Sheriff’s Office, ACC Launch New Professional Education Program for Inmates

Logan Dubel, KXAN

Turning Inmates Into Students

Sue Patrick, Community College Daily

Cornell Employment Initiative Aims to Recontextualize Criminal Records

Jacob Mack, Ithaca Journal

COLLEGE ENROLLMENTS

Budget Cuts Threaten Popular Programs Where Louisiana Students Earn College Credits

Elyse Carmosino, NOLA

Community College Enrollment Increases

Elyse Carmosino, San Mateo Daily Journal

A&M-Central Texas: Enrollment Continues to Climb

Karen Clos, Killeen Daily Herald

Editorial: Northland Community and Technical College's Growth, and Success, Are Important to Region

Grand Forks Herald

NEW REPORTS AND EVENTS

Workforce Ready: Exploring Equity in Paid and Unpaid Internships

California Competes

Pandemic-Era Funding for Early Learning Programs Showcases One of the Most Important Investments the United States Can Make

Center for American Progress

Supporting Early Career Faculty at Minority Serving Institutions

The Rutgers Center for Minority Serving Institutions 

Webinar: What the 2024 Results Could Mean for Higher Education

American Council on Education

Fewer Freshmen Enrolled in College This Year Following Troubling FAFSA Cycle

Brookings Institution

Are Community College Students Increasingly Choosing High-Paying Fields of Study? Evidence From Massachusetts

National Bureau of Economic Research

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

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