Wed.May 08, 2024

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What’s keeping adults interested in college from enrolling?

Higher Ed Dive

Money and time are two of the most commonly cited barriers to earning a credential, according to a new survey from Gallup and the Lumina Foundation.

College 323
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Fewer, larger, modules could help students too

Wonkhe

Can larger and fewer modules offer a pedagogic benefit as well as cost savings? Jackie Potter and Laura Milne look at both sides of the block The post Fewer, larger, modules could help students too appeared first on Wonkhe.

Students 229
university leaders

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Trending Sources

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How can public colleges prepare for ADA digital accessibility requirements?

Higher Ed Dive

A new Justice Department rule aims to ensure state and local government web content and mobile apps are accessible for people with disabilities.

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Turning scrutiny on security into a new security strategy

Wonkhe

For James Coe, there’s an opportunity to define a new university security agenda based on soft-power, economic cooperation and continual engagement The post Turning scrutiny on security into a new security strategy appeared first on Wonkhe.

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Understanding the Social Change Model of Leadership (SCM): Igniting Students’ Academic Development P

The article addresses the Social Change Model of Leadership Development. It elucidates the SMC background, key assumptions, and the main pillars of the model to form a a change agent who could be helpful with institutional in-service delivery.

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‘A matter of right-sizing’: A look at St. Cloud State’s plan to cut 46 degrees

Higher Ed Dive

The Minnesota university still has a strong revenue base but faces too-high expenses, according to its acting president.

Degree 274
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Opening universities’ doors wide enough to let students’ lives in

Wonkhe

The traumas and challenges students bring with them to higher education need to inform how they are supported in transition, finds Jenny Shaw The post Opening universities’ doors wide enough to let students’ lives in appeared first on Wonkhe.

Students 198

More Trending

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Why the answer to the $64,000 question is … $64,000: How much do students need to live on?

HEPI

We have – finally – today achieved something I have long wanted HEPI to do: we have taken a blank sheet of paper and worked out how much money students need to live on. By ‘need to live’ we don’t mean just avoiding poverty; nor do we mean living in plush comfort. We mean having around enough income to be safe, warm and decently fed, to be able to buy necessary course-related items and to be able to get involved with the non-academic side of university life, perhaps by joining a society or two.

Students 140
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A Faculty Leader Sounds the Alarm About Higher Ed's 'Crisis of Repression'

The Chronicle of Higher Education

An interview with Irene Mulvey, president of the AAUP. By Sammy Feldblum An interview with Irene Mulvey, president of the AAUP, about recent campus crackdowns on protesters.

Faculty 137
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Beyond the Research

Inside Higher Ed

Beyond the Research Sarah Bray Wed, 05/08/2024 - 03:00 AM Michel Estefan offers a roadmap for helping graduate student instructors cultivate their distinct teaching style.

Students 130
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Turnitin: More than Half of Students Continue to Use AI to Write Papers

Campus Technology

Since its launch in April 2023, Turnitin's AI writing detection tool has reviewed over 200 million papers, with data showing that more than half of students continue to use AI to write their papers.

Students 124
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Liberal Arts Microcredentials on the Rise

Inside Higher Ed

Liberal Arts Microcredentials on the Rise Sara Weissman Wed, 05/08/2024 - 03:00 AM Badges and certificates aren’t just for technical fields anymore.

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Higher ed’s hefty price tag forces students to reconsider its value

University Business

Nationwide, folks are reconsidering the need for a college degree. Their reasons have varied over the years, but most people will tell you cost is their greatest barrier to entry in 2024. That’s according to a recent survey from Gallup and the Lumina Foundation, the latest read on Americans’ perceptions of the overwhelming cost of pursuing higher education.

Students 111
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MIT Will Stop Asking Faculty Applicants for Diversity Statements

Inside Higher Ed

Massachusetts Institute of Technology departments will no longer ask for diversity statements as part of applications for faculty positions, the university says.

Faculty 126
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Integrating AI Into the College Admissions Process

Liaison International

Artificial intelligence and machine learning have only just begun to revolutionize the landscape of graduate admissions. As the future rapidly unfolds, the heart of this transformation will continue to lie in the evaluation of candidates, where the concept of holistic college admissions plays a pivotal role. Institutions embracing emergent technologies and strategies can now use data to align their holistic approach with their overarching mission and the specific objectives of individual program

College 101
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Survey Shows College Students Largely Support Pro-Palestinian Protests

Inside Higher Ed

Nearly two-thirds of college students say they are at least somewhat supportive of pro-Palestinian protests on their campuses, according to an Intelligent.com survey of 763 current, full-time college students. Only 11 percent said they oppose the protests, while the remainder said they're unsure how they feel.

College 131
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Australia’s financial requirement capacity for int’l students rises again

The PIE News

Australia is set to raise the amount of savings needed by international students to gain student visas, as the financial capacity requirement is increased for the second time in seven months. The new rule will come into effect on May 10, and will see international students required to show proof of savings of at least AUD$29,710. The amount was recently raised to AUD$24,505 from AUD$21,041 in October 2023.

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State Higher Ed Funding is Still Rising—for Now

Inside Higher Ed

State Higher Ed Funding is Still Rising—for Now Liam Knox Wed, 05/08/2024 - 03:00 AM Even as federal stimulus waned, lawmakers boosted support for public colleges in 2023, with an emphasis on financial aid. Can it make up for falling tuition revenue?

College 131
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Top 10 Tips to Optimize Your Microsoft 365 Storage

Campus Technology

As Microsoft transitions from unlimited storage for education customers to a maximum of 100TB of free storage across OneDrive, SharePoint, and Exchange, here are 10 ways to manage your storage more efficiently and keep storage costs in check.

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US Department of Education announces grant program to boost FAFSA completion

University Business

The U.S. Department of Education announced a multimillion-dollar grant program on Monday to help students apply for federal financial aid. It comes after the rollout of changes to the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, caused delays throughout this year’s college admissions process. The changes were meant to make it easier to fill out and expand access to Pell Grants, which don’t need to be repaid.

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Report Finds Increased Interest in Higher Ed for Career Advancement

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Lumina Foundation and Gallup's State of Higher Education 2024 Report Lumina Foundation and Gallup While interest in higher education is increasingly high among adults, many perspective students see cost as a hindrance while some current students are dispirited by emotional stress, according to a new study by Lumina Foundation and Gallup. The State of Higher Education 2024 Report documents how current, prospective, and stopped-out students view post-high school education pathways, their access to

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For Title IX, Beware Diminishing Due Process

Inside Higher Ed

For Title IX, Beware Diminishing Due Process Elizabeth Redden Wed, 05/08/2024 - 11:01 AM Colleges should be wary of adopting weaker due process protections permitted under the new Title IX regulations, T. Markus Funk and Jean-Jacques Cabou write. Byline(s) T.

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Zamani-Gallaher Appointed Dean of School of Education

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Dr. Eboni M. Zamani-Gallaher has been named the Renée and Richard Goldman Endowed Dean of the School of Education at the University of Pittsburgh. “I am honored and excited to serve as the Renée and Richard Goldman Endowed Dean of the University of Pittsburgh School of Education,” said Zamani-Gallaher, a professor in the Pittsburgh’s Department of Educational Foundations, Organizations, and Policy.

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Element451 Introduces Gen AI Assistants for Higher Education

Campus Technology

Higher education student engagement platform Element451 has introduced two new tools to its AI-powered system: Bolt AI Assistants and Bolt Discovery.

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Education Department Steps Up Efforts to Combat Antisemitism

Inside Higher Ed

Education Department Steps Up Efforts to Combat Antisemitism Katherine Knott Wed, 05/08/2024 - 03:00 AM Amid widespread campus unrest, new guidance from the Office for Civil Rights spells out how the agency is interpreting federal civil rights laws.

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Unique School Newsletter Ideas for Enhancing K-12 School Engagement

HEM (Higher Education Marketing)

Reading Time: 8 minutes Newsletters have long been a staple in school communication, bridging students, parents, and educators. If you’re unfamiliar with this marketing channel, what is a school newsletter? A school newsletter is a publication created by schools to communicate important information, updates, and events to students, parents, and staff.

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Texas Lawmakers Applaud Crackdown by UT Austin President

Inside Higher Ed

Fifty-one Texas lawmakers signed a letter of support for University of Texas-Austin president Jay Hartzell after the university’s chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) criticized his administration’s “militarized response” to campus protests and called for his resignation.

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MARY ALEXANDER

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Mary Alexander has been named vice provost for administration and operations at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. She served as vice provost for administration at the University of South Carolina in Columbia. Alexander holds a bachelor’s degree in both finance and operations management, a master’s in public administration, and a doctorate in higher education policy and leadership all from the University of South Carolina.

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The Wild West has finally arrived. It’s going to get wilder.

Jon Boeckenstedt

In December, 2019, people in the college admission profession learned that a lawsuit brought by the Justice Department against The National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC) had been settled, effectively pulling the rug out from under the association’s Statement of Principles of Good Practice, or SPGP as it was known among thousands of people […]

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Philley to Become the Next UT Tyler President

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Dr. Julie V. Philley has been named president of the University of Texas at Tyler. Philley, who succeeds Dr. Kirk A. Calhoun, serves as the university’s executive vice president for health affairs and vice provost and is a board-certified physician in pulmonary and critical care medicine. Dr. Julie V. Philley “I am grateful for so many experiences provided to me at UT Tyler that offered a valuable understanding of the complexities of higher education and health care, and I am eager to work in th

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Peter McGovern, EdOdyssey, US

The PIE News

Peter McGovern is founder & president of EdOdyssey. As the study abroad specialist celebrates its 10th anniversary this year, he told The PIE about the influence of teachers, the sector’s most pressing challenges and why he’s excited about what’s ahead. Introducing yourself in three words or phrases. I would describe myself as driven, curious and humble.

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The Aspen Institute Names Semifinalists for Aspen Prize

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

The global nonprofit Aspen Institute has named 20 semifinalists for the 2025 Aspen Prize for Community College Excellence, a $1 million prize. The award — funded by Ascendium, the Joyce Foundation, JPMorgan Chase, and the Kresge Foundation — recognizes colleges with outstanding performance in teaching and learning, certificate and degree completion, transfer and bachelor’s attainment, workforce success, broad access to the college and its offerings, and equitable outcomes for students of color a

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Colleges are now closing at a pace of one a week. What happens to the students? - Jon Marcus, Hechinger Report

Economics and Change in Higher Education

About one university or college per week so far this year, on average, has announced that it will close or merge. That’s up from a little more than two a month last year, according to the State Higher Education Executive Officers Association, or SHEEO. So many colleges are folding that some students who moved from one to another have now found that their new school will also close, often with little or no warning.

College 59
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Inside the UIA’s 2023 Annual Report

UIA (University Innovation Alliance)

Inside the UIA’s 2023 Annual Report bridget Thu, 05/09/2024 - 00:10 Image Graduation Higher Ed Leadership Student Success University Innovation Lab This coming October, the University Innovation Alliance (UIA) will celebrate ten years of collaborating with higher education institutions to increase their graduation rates. Our starting goal in 2014 was awarding an additional 68,000 undergraduate degrees above baseline over the next decade – a goal that our 11 founding institutions reached four yea

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Faculty Stand With Student Protesters

Insight Into Diversity

In recent developments at the University of Chicago (UC), faculty members have taken a prominent role in supporting pro-Palestinian student protesters amid ongoing tensions regarding a student encampment on campus. In an expression of stark solidarity, faculty from a range of departments have expressed their willingness to face arrest alongside students, should it come to that, in order to safeguard their right to peaceful protest.

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Using AI to Drive Growth and Efficiency in Higher Education: Gray DI Launches AI Reports for Academic Program Evaluation

Gray Associates

Today, Gray DI, the leading provider of academic program evaluation software, launched AI Reports: easy-to-understand text reports that summarize dozens of metrics on the markets for academic programs. AI Reports enables leaders from English to Engineering professors to academic deans, provosts, and presidents to understand the markets for programs and make better decisions on academic programs to Start, Stop, Fix, or Grow – decisions that drive enrollment growth and efficiency.

Provost 52
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State ranks No. 1 for education despite years of controversy

University Business

Florida and its governor have stirred up plenty of controversy around K12 and higher education in recent years. But Florida still landed No. 1—for the second year in a row—in U.S. News & World Report ‘s top 10 states for education rankings. Florida’s overall No. 1 ranking was driven primarily by “stellar metrics in higher education” though it also performed strongly for K12. “The debate around education in Florida is among the most contentious in America,”