Mon.Mar 11, 2024

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Stop Cooling Out the Next Generation’s Aspirations

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

That animals avoid environments which seem unhealthy due to predators or poor conditions is a well-documented ecological phenomenon. Humans are no different. We, too, instinctively avoid environments that look unhealthy or unwelcoming. It is therefore time to connect the dots among efforts to dismantle diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) activities, overturn race-conscious admissions, and bring back standardized tests.

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Lumina Awards Millions for Admissions Innovations

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Lumina Awards Millions for Admissions Innovations Johanna Alonso Mon, 03/11/2024 - 03:00 AM The seven winning states and university systems will use the funds for direct admissions, universal transfer pathways and other initiatives to simplify admissions.

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College Degree Still Sound Investment, Despite Rising Tuition

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Earning a college degree is still a sound investment, although the rate of economic return varies across college majors and student demographics, according to a new American Educational Research Association (AERA) analysis of 5.8 million Americans. Dr. Liang Zhang “Our cost-benefit analysis finds that on average a college degree offers better returns than the stock market,” said study coauthor Dr.

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Performance-based funding: The new normal or a schtick?

University Business

With public trust in higher education waning and a barrage of reports illustrating the middling outcomes associated with Americans who earn a college degree, state lawmakers are fighting to restore public trust in their institutions by promising to hold them more accountable. An increasingly popular tactic is dangling money over the heads of its two- or four-year institutions—or both—through performance-based funding models.

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NEHEMIAH YISRAEL

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Nehemiah Yisrael Nehemiah Yisrael has been named director of procurement and property control at Morgan State University in Baltimore. He served as the director of procurement at the United States Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Services in Alexandria, Virginia. Yisrael is also the recipient of two “Meritorious Civilian Service Awards” for leadership from the United States Navy.

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What is The Future of RDs? – Being Intentional Can Lead To Real Change

Roompact

This blog series features different writers responding to the prompt, “What is the future of the RD position and role?” Guest Post by Ali Martin Scoufield, Residence Life Professional I have…let’s call them ‘fond’ memories of participating in job placement. I completed speed-date style job interviews one after the other, sustaining myself for days on.

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The Career Benefits of Volunteer Engagement

Confessions of a Community College Dean

The Career Benefits of Volunteer Engagement Sarah Bray Mon, 03/11/2024 - 03:00 AM You can use such opportunities to network, develop skills outside your comfort zone, try bold things and contribute to society, writes Chris Smith.

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CCS Communication Design Students named as GDUSA Students to Watch

College for Creative Study

With the help of several of America’s leading art and design schools, we once again identify top students ready to burst on the design scene.

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Virginia Bans Legacy Preferences in Admissions

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Virginia governor Glenn Youngkin signed bills Friday prohibiting the state’s public universities from giving preference to legacy applicants in admissions decisions. The legislation, unanimously approved by both chambers of the General Assembly, holds that public institutions cannot offer an admissions advantage based on a student’s legacy status or “familial relationship to any donor to such institution.

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Catastrophic Risk of Artificial Intelligence

Higher Education Whisperer

Greetings from the Australian National University Colloquium on Artificial Intelligence and Catastrophic Risk. Normally I attend weekly AI, ML and Friends Seminars in the ANU School of Computing, but today I am in the social sciences building, with philosophers. The colloquium is by the ANU Machine Intelligence and Normative Theory Lab.

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Let’s Have Better Debates About Standardized Tests

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Let’s Have Better Debates About Standardized Tests Elizabeth Redden Mon, 03/11/2024 - 03:00 AM Ben Paris argues that test critics downplay the disadvantages of test-optional policies.

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Klarna says its AI assistant does the work of 700 people after it laid off 700 people - Christopher Zara, Fast Company

Ray Schroeder

One month after taking its OpenAI-powered virtual assistant global, the Swedish buy-now, pay-later company has released new data touting its ability to handle customer communications, make shoppers happier, and even drive better financial results. The app-based AI chatbot already handles two-thirds of all customer service chats, the company said Tuesday—some 2.3 million conversations so far—with the virtual assistant earning customer satisfaction ratings at the same level as human agents.

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Louisiana Stops Requiring FAFSA Completion in High School

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Louisiana Stops Requiring FAFSA Completion in High School Doug Lederman Mon, 03/11/2024 - 03:00 AM Some state officials say the policy was burdensome and promoted college-going over more vocational paths. Critics of the change fear it will impede college attainment for needy students.

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Is University Really Worth It? review – not when students are left starving

The Guardian Higher Education

This bleak, eye-opening film finds mass strikes, gobsmacking whistleblower lecturers and med students forced to survive on food rations of £10 a week. Higher education is failing so many The comedian Geoff Norcott has a dilemma: should he be saving money so his son, “Little Geoff”, can go to university when the time comes, or should he buy a new car now?

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‘Nature’ Investigation Examines How Research Fraud Case Unfolded

Confessions of a Community College Dean

An investigation by the journal Nature into the retraction last year of major research findings by a physicist at the University of Rochester reveals significant flaws in how university officials and scientific journals handled the matter.

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College Possible Minnesota names nonprofit leader Deb Salls as new executive director

College Forward

College Possible Minnesota, the Minnesota chapter of the pioneering national college access and success nonprofit, has appointed Deb Salls as its new executive director. A celebrated nonprofit leader, Ms. Salls brings decades of relevant experience working youth and other social impact organizations. “I am very excited to join the College Possible Minnesota team,” said Deb.

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It’s More Important Than Ever to Invest in Research Communication

Confessions of a Community College Dean

It’s More Important Than Ever to Invest in Research Communication Doug Lederman Mon, 03/11/2024 - 03:00 AM Sharing big ideas in easy-to-understand ways can help academics and their colleges and universities expand their reach into the public sphere.

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Virginia becomes second state to ban university legacy admissions

University Business

Virginia will become the second state to ban legacy admissions at public colleges and universities after Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed a bill that unanimously cleared the state legislature. The bill says public universities cannot give preferential admissions to college applicants based on their familial relationship to the school. Virginia joins Colorado as the only states to ban the practice.

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A.I. and the Labor Force

Confessions of a Community College Dean

A short history of labor. A few weeks ago, not wanting to sacrifice class time, I offered a short history of corporations in the U.S. Now that we are reading Kate Crawford’s Atlas of AI, I complement that essay with one on labor. The labor movement in the U.S. is an outgrowth of industrial capitalism. Free labor had long been unshackled from the constraints of feudalism and further separated from tradition by immigration (indentured servitude or free labor) or forced migration (people sold into

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UT Austin Reinstates Standardized Test Scores in Admissions

University Business

After four years of test-optional admissions for undergraduate applications, The University of Texas at Austin will return to requiring standardized testing scores, beginning with applications for the Fall 2025 semester. Analysis of the University’s own data further revealed that on average, students who submitted standardized scores performed significantly better on those exams and in their first semester of college, relative to those who did not take the test or chose not to have their scores

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How to Make Jeopardy! Work for Your Career: Academic Minute

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Today on the Academic Minute: Daniel Newton, assistant professor of management and entrepreneurship at the University of Iowa’s Tippie College of Business, explores how one quiz show could help your career.

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SUNY campuses begin phasing out plastic bottles, bags, utensils, even balloons

University Business

SUNY campuses will phase out the use of plastic utensils, bags, bottles and other items in the coming years as part of a statewide push to keep hard-to-recycle waste out of landfills. The new policy phasing out so-called single-use plastics came out of recommendations made by a task force that began studying the issue two years ago. Grocery bags, water and beverage bottles, plastic wrap, stirrers, straws, utensils — even balloons — will be phased out in stages as more plastic-free alternatives a

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Foundations Students and Faculty work on exhibition at Livonia Town Center

College for Creative Study

CCS Foundations faculty and students have work on exhibition at Livonia Town Center in a show called Side by Side 2. Faculty Elena Arnaoutova, Jen Fitzpatrick, Michelle Lannoo, Joshua Mulligan, Dan Stewart, Peter Dunn and Lorraine Thomas have work featured along side students David yoon, Winter Stevenson, Elvin Poskovic, Sydney Faulkner, Emma Goldstein, Lou Tucker and Ella Hall in Livonia, Mi.

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More Than Half of Recent 4-Year College Grads Underemployed - Sara Weissman, Inside Higher Ed

Ray Schroeder

More than half of recent four-year college graduates, 52 percent, are underemployed a year after they graduate, according to a new report from Strada Institute for the Future of Work and the Burning Glass Institute. A decade after graduation, 45 percent of them still don’t hold a job that requires a four-year degree. Those stark data points were highlighted in a report released today called “Talent Disrupted.

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From the Margins to the Mainstream, and Perhaps Back

Confessions of a Community College Dean

From the Margins to the Mainstream, and Perhaps Back mprutter@mit.

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Biden Calls for Greater Support of HBCUs, HSIs, and MSIs

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

President Biden addresses Congress on March 7. When President Biden addressed over 32 million viewers for the annual State of the Union (SOTU) last week, he used the occasion to issue a full throttle support for higher education. While speaking on his administration’s accomplishments in his last four years of service, Biden also addressed what he called “the future of possibilities we can build together.

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