Fri.Apr 12, 2024

article thumbnail

JEREMI LONDON

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Dr. Jeremi London Jeremi London has been named assistant provost of academic opportunity and belonging in the Office of Undergraduate Education at Vanderbilt University. She served as associate professor of engineering education at Virginia Tech. London holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in industrial engineering and a Ph.D. in engineering education, all from Purdue University.

article thumbnail

Traction for the Three-Year Bachelor’s Degree

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Traction for the Three-Year Bachelor’s Degree Doug Lederman Fri, 04/12/2024 - 03:00 AM A group of college leaders strategize about how to design a new undergraduate experience—and get an unexpected boost from an accreditor.

143
143
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

President’s corner: Dr. Larry Johnson on leading one of the nation’s most successful community colleges

University Business

Dr. Larry Johnson first encountered Stella and Charles Guttman Community College in 2015 as a dean at Broward College (Fla.) when he read the seminal book “Redesigning America’s Community Colleges: A Clearer Path to Student Success.” Already well abreast of the role two-year institutions can play in students’ lives, Johnson was enamored by Guttman’s bold ways it geared students for success: appreciative advising , first-year student cohort team-building exercises an

article thumbnail

National Protest Day Planned Against ‘Attacks’ on Higher Ed

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Faculty members and students plan to hold events across numerous campuses Wednesday, April 17, to kick-start a movement against what they consider concerted attacks on quality higher education for all. They’re opposing academic freedom restrictions, defending protest rights, supporting diversity, equity and inclusion, calling for free public education, and advocating for more secure faculty jobs, among other things.

Faculty 145
article thumbnail

SAAL's Dynamic 1st Quarter: Progress, Initiatives, and Community Engagement

Student Affairs Assessment Leaders (SAAL)

SAAL's Dynamic 1st Quarter: Progress, Initiatives, and Community Engagement The journey of the Student Affairs Assessment Leaders (SAAL) through 2024 has been nothing short of transformative and inspiring for me as President! I am humbled to be the leader of an organization that sits at the heart of enhancing equity and inclusivity in student affairs assessment through our actions.

article thumbnail

Georgia University’s Decision to Close Prison Program Prompts ‘Heartbreak’

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Georgia University’s Decision to Close Prison Program Prompts ‘Heartbreak’ Sara Weissman Fri, 04/12/2024 - 03:00 AM Professors and students want Georgia State University to keep its college-in-prison program open. The institution’s leaders say new federal standards make it too costly to do so.

IT 137
article thumbnail

University of Arizona deficit cut from $177 million to $162 million - Ellie Wolfe, Tucson.com

Ray Schroeder

After an initial round of budget cuts and spending measures, the University of Arizona’s deficit has shrunk from $177 million to $162 million, says interim Chief Financial Officer John Arnold. Arnold gave an update on the “good news” for UA’s finances to the Arizona Board of Regents’ University Governance and Operations committee on Thursday. The UA’s current cash balance is $748 million, or $157 million less than it was last year at this time.

Finance 73

More Trending

article thumbnail

4 Things to Consider Before a Higher Ed Physical Security Assessment

EdTech Magazine - Higher Education

Anyone versed in the use of security cameras is familiar with the DORI standard: When surveying a site, the decision about where to position a device will affect the camera’s detection, observation, recognition and identification capabilities. While universities in the market for a physical security upgrade don’t need to understand everything about DORI, they should be prepared to help their vendors position cameras for maximum coverage.

73
article thumbnail

Harvard and Caltech Restore Test Requirements

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Harvard and Caltech Restore Test Requirements Liam Knox Fri, 04/12/2024 - 03:00 AM The decisions, announced hours apart, came more than a year before their temporary policies were set to expire—and after a wave of similar decisions by their competitors.

134
134
article thumbnail

Graduate outcomes: Beyond numbers, towards quality?

SRHE

by Tej Nathwani and Ghislaine Dell with a foreword and afterword by SRHE Network Convenors Tracy Scurry and Daria Luchinskaya Foreword As many of us working with graduate employment statistics will know, it’s difficult to find up-to-date large-scale data of graduates’ experiences of work. In the SRHE event Exploring graduate outcomes: Do we need to look beyond earnings and occupation?

article thumbnail

Report: Biden’s New Debt Relief Plan Estimated to Cost $84 Billion

Confessions of a Community College Dean

President Biden’s new plan to forgive some or all student loans for 26 million Americans would cost about $84 billion over 10 years, according to economists at the Penn Wharton Budget Model, a nonpartisan research organization at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. When combined with the administration’s income-driven repayment plan, known as Saving On a Valuable Education, the total cost would be $559 billion.

Research 130
article thumbnail

Northland College misses fundraising target, but will stay open — for now - Ben Unglesbee, Higher Ed Dive

Ray Schroeder

After warning in March of potential closure, Northland College will stay open for now but declared financial exigency, the board of trustees announced Thursday evening. The board said it would make “a final decision” about the college’s future in two weeks. In declaring exigency, Wisconsin-based Northland is formally recognizing a “serious financial crisis,” the board said.

article thumbnail

Is College Worth It?

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Is College Worth It? Elizabeth Redden Fri, 04/12/2024 - 03:00 AM David Wippman and Glenn C. Altschuler review a new book taking on the “myth” of the college wage premium. Byline(s) David Wippman Glenn C.

IT 124
article thumbnail

Benefits rate increases vary by plan

CU Work-Life Balance

The University of Colorado benefits cost changes will vary by plan — with no or low monthly premium increases for most CU Health Plans and larger increases for others. The university will continue to contribute 90% of premiums, averaged across all medical and dental benefits. Rates begin with the 2024-25 plan year on July 1. While the university’s four medical plans will not undergo significant benefit changes this year, they will expand no-cost coverage for certain types of generic preventive t

article thumbnail

OCR: Hinds Community College Failed to Support Pregnant Student, Violated Title IX

Confessions of a Community College Dean

OCR: Hinds Community College Failed to Support Pregnant Student, Violated Title IX Katherine Knott Fri, 04/12/2024 - 03:00 AM Byline(s) Katherine Knott

Title IX 130
article thumbnail

Harvard University becomes latest Ivy League to reinstate SAT, ACT for admissions

University Business

Following the footsteps of its Ivy League peers, including Yale, Dartmouth and Brown, Harvard University announced that it is reinstating its standardized testing requirement in admissions beginning with the Class of 2029. Harvard had initially said the test-optional policy would remain in effect until applications for the Class of 2030, according to The Harvard Crimson.

article thumbnail

Ukraine Will Inspect Huge Spike in Enrollments by Draft-Age Students

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Ukraine Will Inspect Huge Spike in Enrollments by Draft-Age Students Marjorie Valbrun Fri, 04/12/2024 - 03:00 AM College applications climbed by almost 2,000 percent in 2022, the year of the Russian invasion. Most students chose low-cost courses with minimal entrance requirements.

article thumbnail

Two-thirds of US colleges, universities require DEI classes to graduate: report

University Business

Most American colleges and universities require the completion of courses that emphasize Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI)-related topics to graduate, according to a new report surveying public and private institutions. Speech First, a group advocating for First Amendment rights on US campuses, released an investigation on Thursday that found 165 of 248 selected institutions mandate DEI-related classes to meet general education requirements.

DEI 52
article thumbnail

Why We Hate to Wait: Academic Minute

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Today on the Academic Minute: Annabelle Roberts, assistant professor of marketing at the McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin, explains why we’re most impatient right before we get what we want.

59
article thumbnail

New College President Richard Corcoran gets $200K bonus after first year

University Business

New College of Florida President Richard Corcoran, who spearheaded a controversial remaking of the Sarasota school over the last year, received a $200,000 bonus Thursday from a majority of trustees who said he had met the goals they set for him. The money adds to Corcoran’s base salary of $699,000, a sum that made him one of the state’s highest paid university presidents when it was awarded last year.

IT 52
article thumbnail

An Update on the First Months of the Return to Repayment

Ed.gov Blog

By: Dr. Jordan Matsudaira and U.S. Undersecretary of Education James Kvaal Highlights As the Department of Education works to smoothly transition borrowers back into repayment, we highlight the following: More borrowers made payments on their loans in January and February of this year than in any previous month since these data started being collected in Continue Reading The post An Update on the First Months of the Return to Repayment appeared first on ED.gov Blog.

article thumbnail

Student-athletes are at double the risk of suicide than they were two decades ago, study

University Business

The suicide rates of college student-athletes have doubled in the past two decades, according to a new study from the British Journal of Sports Medicine. Researchers from the University of Washington, the University of Wisconsin at Madison and Oregon Health and Science University found that between July 2002 and June 2022, the rate of NCAA varsity athlete deaths by suicide rose to 15.3%, an alarm-raising jump from 7.6%.

article thumbnail

Can't Stop, Won't Stop

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Picture the moment you watch a police officer kneel on a Black man's ( George Floyd ) neck on the side of a busy street with folks watching. To go further, reflect on the moment when police bombarded a Black woman's “ Breonna Taylor ” and shot her to death. If you are reading this, I am sure your heart has been tugged on, and you remember where you were sitting in 2020 during a global pandemic.

DEI 274
article thumbnail

Heritage Foundation's 2025 "Mandate for Leadership" Presents Trump Playbook for Privatizing US Education and Reducing Oversight

Higher Education Inquirer

The Heritage Foundation's 2025 Mandate for Leadership details what the next Trump Administration has in store for US higher education. The Education section starts on page 319. The Mandate was created by an army of writers and policy people, and it is approved by at least 100 conservative groups, including Liberty University and Turning Point USA. While one major goal is to eliminate the US Department of Education, there are many other privatization schemes in the works--shifting powers to the c

article thumbnail

Biden-Harris Administration Announces Additional $7.4B in Approved Student Debt Relief

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

The Biden-Harris Administration has announced the approval of $7.4 billion in additional student loan debt relief for 277,000 borrowers, primarily eligible borrowers who signed up for the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) Plan. Dr. Miguel Cardona The administration reported that nearly 8 million borrowers have been helped by the SAVE plan. Its newly approved relief brings the total loan forgiveness to $153 billion for nearly 4.3 million Americans.