Thu.Jan 04, 2024

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Oden Assumes Historic Appointment at Thurgood Marshall College Fund

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Racquel Oden is the first woman in Thurgood Marshall College Fund’s 37-year history to assume the role of Board Chair, announced the organization, which was founded in 1987 by Dr. N. Joyce Payne as a bastion of support for Black students seeking higher education. Racquel Oden Thurgood Marshall College Fund, Inc. Oden takes the new role with extensive experience in finance and a highly regarded reputation in the wealth management business, according to TMCF .

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Former Harvard President Defends, Explains Herself in Op-Ed

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Claudine Gay, who resigned as president of Harvard University Tuesday, defended herself and condemned the attacks against her and the university in an opinion article in The New York Times Wednesday.

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JENNIFER WELLS-MARSHALL

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Dr. Jennifer Wells-Marshall Jennifer Wells-Marshall has been named associate director of the Alabama Cooperative Extension Service at Alabama A&M University. Marshall holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Tuskegee University as well as a master’s in human development and family studies and a doctorate in educational psychology from Auburn University.

Education 254
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Put Your Teaching Evaluations in a Jar

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Put Your Teaching Evaluations in a Jar Sarah Bray Thu, 01/04/2024 - 03:00 AM You can just ignore them, or you can take some positive steps to ensure that they will push you forward in your teaching, writes Constanza Bartholomae.

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Teacher-Run Organization Seeks to Educate Students on Historical Resistance Efforts

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Two major New York state universities are collaborating with a teacher-run organization seeking to teach communities and students about civil resistance in local history, creating an online platform to display the organization’s curricula and local resistance efforts. Kesha James Now going into its third year of operations, the Antiracist Curriculum Project (ACP) has been working diligently to develop social studies curriculum that teaches students about the systemic injustices and historical re

Education 241
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What’s Next for Ed Tech in 2024

Confessions of a Community College Dean

What’s Next for Ed Tech in 2024 Lauren.Coffey@… Thu, 01/04/2024 - 03:00 AM Coming soon: advances in VR and high-tech classrooms, plus even more AI.

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The next ‘evolution’ in public colleges’, universities’ state funding model has arrived, per report

University Business

Complete College America, the nonprofit dedicated to improving equitable student outcomes, has long championed its model its outcomes-based funding model to help bolster graduation rates. However, it believes its next “evolution” has arrived: completion-goals funding. After over a decade of implementation, CCA has found outcomes-based funding to be a crude method.

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Should Higher Education Consider Cloud-Based VPNs?

EdTech Magazine - Higher Education

While virtual private network technology has been around in one form or another for over a quarter century, many people’s first encounters with VPNs were during the pandemic, when the ability to remotely access secure campus networks became a necessity for people working and studying from home. Post-pandemic, the need for remote access has slowed from its frantic 2020 pace, but hasn’t stopped.

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New on the Job: Kafui Kouakou, AVP of Career Development and Experiential Learning

Confessions of a Community College Dean

New on the Job: Kafui Kouakou, AVP of Career Development and Experiential Learning Ashley Mowreader Thu, 01/04/2024 - 03:00 AM The inaugural role at Quinnipiac University prioritizes hands-on learning inside and outside the classroom to promote career readiness for students.

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Claudine Gay’s resignation had nothing to do with plagiarism | Moira Donegan

The Guardian Higher Education

Her resignation is merely the latest episode in the right wing’s assault on education – a project that has increased in its virulence in recent years Any political observer who is not too stupid or too full of himself to notice what is going on knows that the resignation of Claudine Gay, the president of Harvard University who was driven from her job this week, had nothing to do with plagiarism.

Education 111
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The Black Woman in Residence Education 

Roompact

Black women make up 64.1% of bachelor’s degrees earned by Black college students. When it comes to masters degrees, the figure becomes 71.5%. As for doctoral, medical, and dental degrees, 65.9% of them have been obtained by black women. In other words, Black women have arrived on the scene of higher education, and we have.

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Advice Higher Ed Institutions Can Give Students to Help Manage Their Storage

EdTech Magazine - Higher Education

Higher education leaders are familiar with difficult conversations. They’re an important part of leadership, after all, and administrators need to make hard choices every day as part of the delicate balance of institutional priorities, student success, employee welfare, budgets, security and so much more. In the higher ed IT world, one ongoing difficult conversation revolves around managing cloud storage.

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Colorado becomes one of the first to employ an incarcerated professor

University Business

For the two-hour class, David Carrillo, the adjunct professor teaching for Adams State University, mostly kept his hands in his pockets as he lectured students in green uniforms, some bright and others faded with time. Like his students at the Colorado Territorial Correctional Facility, Carrillo, 49, also wears green. He holds a position that is extremely rare in prison: He’s an incarcerated professor teaching in a prison bachelor’s degree program.

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From Our Clients: Top 4 Ways to Use CSM in 2024

Symplicity

New year, same you? Maybe, maybe not. As the new year begins, institutions and offices across the country are returning from their winter break ready to kick start a busy spring semester. Instead of adding to a list of New Year’s resolutions likely already on your plate for the new year and semester, we’re taking a deeper dive with CSM. Hear from our clients the tools they are using to provide you with some inspiration to take with you into the new year.

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Howard U Investigates Social Media Video Taken by Trespassers

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Howard University is investigating an alleged break-in and vandalism after a video circulated on social media, showing three unknown individuals walking through the university’s former divinity school, The Washington Post reported. The building, Benjamin E. Mays Hall, still houses archival materials.

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Lessons from learning analytics

SRHE

by Liz Moores and Rob Summers Why bother collecting learning analytics data? Some of the reported benefits of using learning analytics data include enabling personalised learning and narrowing attainment gaps. Indeed, a quick dip into some of the recent TEF feedback summaries to higher education institutions seems to suggest that use of learning analytics is valued by TEF panels.

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University of North Dakota Plans to Return Tribal Remains

Confessions of a Community College Dean

The University of North Dakota plans to begin returning Native American ancestral remains to their tribes starting this year, The Grand Forks Herald reported.

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Florida colleges’ presidential searches would need more than one finalist, under new bill - Scott Travis, Sun Sentinal

Ray Schroeder

Florida’s public colleges and universities would no longer be allowed to select their presidents in total secrecy, under proposed new legislation. State Sen. Tina Polsky, D-Boca Raton, filed a bill this week that would require a college or university to select three to five finalists whose names would become public. Her bill is in response to a string of recent presidential searches that resulted in only one publicly named finalist, including former U.S.

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Conversation: The Guaranteed Budget-Saver Higher Ed Can’t Buy

EdTech Magazine - Higher Education

Budgeting involves nuanced, difficult conversations. But too often, institutions shy away from the very conversations they should have to make sure that their tech investments are paying off. That’s a mistake. Schools may meet certain goals on their journey and believe that they’re taking the right steps — newer devices, say, or support staff. But when considering efficiency, right-sizing and optimization, it’s about more than evaluating tools.

IT 57
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U of Oklahoma said it’s being forced to eliminate its DEI offices. The ACLU disagrees. - Laura Spitalniak, Higher Ed Dive

Ray Schroeder

The University of Oklahoma is getting pushback from civil rights groups over its interpretation of a recent executive order affecting the state’s diversity, equity and inclusion programs. Last week, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt ordered public colleges to review all of their diversity, equity and inclusion-related programs and jobs. If needed, colleges must eliminate ones that are “not necessary for compliance, accreditation, or student and employee support services intended to support success broad

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This community college has 1 full-time Black faculty member out of 165. Why campuses struggle with diversity

University Business

At Cabrillo College near Santa Cruz, Nikia Chaney stands out. You can spot her bright pink hair from a distance. She’s also the only Black professor out of the community college’s 165 tenured or tenure-track faculty. Faculty diversity has increased slightly over the past 15 years, but a report the chancellor’s office issued in November acknowledged that “progress remains slow.

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Sterling Toles (’00 GC) Selected as Juror for Re/View: CCS Alumni Exhibition

College for Creative Study

We are pleased to announce that Sterling Toles (‘00, GC) has been selected as the 2024 Alumni Juror for Re/View: CCS Alumni Exhibition. Sterling Toles is a visual/sonic artist educator and a 2016 Kresge Fellow. With roots in Detroit’s early 90s hip-hop scene, he views his creative process as a form of personal healing that extends to collective well-being.

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Study Abroad Housing: Living with a Host Family in a Homestay

AIFS Abroad

After deciding where and when you want to study abroad, a good question to ask yourself is, “What is my preferred housing situation ?” While some enjoy the independence of a shared apartment or a dorm with other students, the best way to immerse yourself in the local culture is to stay with a host family in a homestay. Read on to learn more about why you should choose to live in a homestay during your study abroad program: First, what is a homestay?

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Maintaining Faith

Hope College Network

Your schedule is busy, you’re running late to class, your homework isn’t done and you forgot to print something off for class. Your friends tried encouraging you to go to chapel, but you have no time. Even the idea of church on Sunday is exhausting. Devotions take too much time from homework. Praying takes time from a struggling sleep schedule.

IT 52
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A Modern-Day Greek Tragedy

Confessions of a Community College Dean

A Modern-Day Greek Tragedy mprutter@mit.edu Thu, 01/04/2024 - 03:00 AM How the classic tragedies of the past speak to events today.

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Hope’s Collaborative Culture Across Campus

Hope College Network

One of my favorite aspects about Hope College is that I am more than just a number on campus – professors and faculty know, value, and care about the students. From the dining hall staff that greet me enthusiastically each morning to the classroom where my professors ask about how my cross country race went to faculty of the Boerigter Center who will send me job opportunities that they think I would be interested in and every interaction in between, Hope fosters an environment that cultivates me

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Claudine Gay’s resignation highlights the trouble with regulating academic writing

University Business

Gay is not the first head of an academic institution unseated by allegations of plagiarism: Marc Tessier-Lavigne resigned last year as Stanford University’s president after an investigation found that several academic reports he authored contained manipulated data. Her downfall raises questions about how people in such high-profile positions can find themselves facing such charges in an age when advanced technology so easily enables detection of alleged cases of plagiarism.

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Transformed by Hope

Hope College Network

Just a few hours ago, I took my last exam and wrapped up my third semester at Hope. Three down, five to go. I’m almost halfway through my time here, which blows my mind! The majority of my college experience still lies ahead but I can confidently say that thus far, I’ve been transformed in my time at Hope. As I learn to navigate life and balance responsibilities away from home, Hope has specifically helped to transform and develop my faith, my friendships and my academic experience.

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Taming Network Interference in the Digital Age: Academic Minute

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Today on the Academic Minute: Christina Yu, assistant professor of operations research and information engineering at Cornell University, explores how to make sure we’re drawing the right conclusions when we use data to make decisions.

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Living in Holland

Hope College Network

When you move to a town you aren’t accustomed to you might be wondering what there is to do. Well, have no fear! As someone who was living in Holland before attending Hope I am here to offer some ideas. Downtown This one is obvious. Since Hope is located right next to Downtown Holland you can easily walk there! Spend an afternoon browsing the small local shops and splurge on yourself.

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The Ones Too Often Left Behind

The Scholarly Teacher

Todd Zakrajsek , Director, Lilly Conferences on Evidence-Based Teaching Key Statement: There is an almost infinite number of things a teacher can do to help those who have been too often left behind by the current educational system. Start by simply thinking about learners in our classes, areas of struggle they may face, and how we might mitigate those areas.

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Visiting Hope College

Hope College Network

I toured Hope in August 2021, right before I started my senior year of high school. I had been on plenty of college tours before, and kept visiting schools after my trip to Hope. Still, this certain visit stood out in my mind through my college decision process. In fact, the nature of my visit to Hope was fundamental to my choice to come to school here.

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To what extent is this chancellor’s First Amendment rights protected? Experts weigh in

University Business

As chancellor of the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, Joe Gow was once surely to be remembered for a tenure that oversaw unprecedented enrollment growth and increased first- and second-year student retention rates. His stewardship at the midsize university drew acclaim from colleagues when he announced his decision to step down at the end of the current academic year.

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Advice on Maximizing the Admissions Journey

Hope College Network

Throughout high school and most especially during this time of year for senior students, high schoolers are asked the seemingly paramount question – where will you be attending college? From the academic advising office to the holiday dinner table to chatter among friends, this single question seems synonymous with high schoolers’ very own identity.

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MIT President Takes Steps to Improve Campus Climate

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Massachusetts Institute of Technology president Sally Kornbluth announced Wednesday she would implement four “New steps for a new year” to address the challenges facing the campus amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas war. The measures are designed to evaluate and improve systems on campus regarding student disciplinary processes, free expression and DEI programs and will include a quality-of-life survey for students and employees.

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The Arts at Hope

Hope College Network

Hope College is a great place for the arts! Even if you’re not majoring or minoring in an arts field, there’s lots of opportunities to get involved. Whether it’s for a general education requirement or just for fun, there are many areas to try out, from theater to music to dance. Theater Regardless of your experience level, anyone can audition for a play at Hope.

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Higher Ed Voices Outrage After Harvard President Resigns

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

In the wake of Dr. Claudine Gay's resignation as president of Harvard earlier this week, higher education scholars have forcefully responded to her forced ouster, arguing that she was clearly targeted as the first Black woman to lead the nation's oldest university. Across social media and on cable talk shows, many seem to view Gay’s persecution and resignation as emblematic of the targeting of higher ed and minority presidents by some conservatives.