Remove 2021 Remove Administration Remove Community College Remove Student Financial Aid
article thumbnail

Community colleges suffer from employee shortages

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Image: Community colleges across the country are struggling to recruit and hire new people after losing faculty and staff members in droves during the pandemic. College leaders report staffing losses at all levels, including IT workers, student success professionals, dining hall workers and executive leaders, she said.

article thumbnail

My 2024 Higher Education Finance Reading List

Robert Kelchen

Public Administration Review, 78 (4), 626-639. link ) University of Tennessee System’s FY2024 budget: [link] University of Tennessee System’s FY2022 annual financial report: [link] UTK’s Budget Allocation Model (responsibility center management) website: [link] Higher education expenditures Archibald, R. Working paper. Stange, K.

Finance 189
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

College endowments dropped in fiscal year 2022

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Image: Soaring inflation put a squeeze on college endowments in the 2021–22 fiscal year, driving returns down, according to the annual report from the National Association of College and University Business Officers The report , released today, is a marked change from the booming returns of fiscal year 2021 , when endowments soared.

article thumbnail

My 2023 Higher Education Finance Reading List

Robert Kelchen

Public Administration Review, 78 (4), 626-639. link ) University of Tennessee System’s FY2023 budget: [link] University of Tennessee System’s FY2022 annual financial report: [link] UTK’s Budget Allocation Model website: [link] Higher education expenditures Archibald, R. link ) Commonfund Institute (2021). Working paper.

Finance 113
article thumbnail

My 2024 Higher Education Finance Reading List (Robert Kelchen)

Higher Education Inquirer

link ) Recommended data sources: College Scorecard: [link] (underlying data at [link] ) Equality of Opportunity Project: [link] IPEDS: [link] NCES Data Lab: [link] Postsecondary Value Commission’s Equitable Value Explorer: [link] ProPublica’s Nonprofit Explorer: [link] Urban Institute’s Data Explorer: [link] Institutional budgeting Barr, M.J., &

Finance 40
article thumbnail

Emergency pandemic funds kept schools afloat, new report says

University Business

Joe Biden’s tenure in office has proven his administration does not take the pandemic lightly for higher education: His $40 billion bandage has helped over 18 million students receive emergency aid since 2021, according to the Department of Education’s latest performance report on HEERF. million students.

article thumbnail

Pandemic higher ed relief helped millions stay enrolled

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Nearly 13 million college students divvied up $19.5 billion in federal COVID-19 emergency aid in 2021, and the Education Department estimated that 18 million total—80 percent of whom were Pell Grant recipients—received aid during the first two years of the Biden administration.