Fri.Mar 22, 2024

article thumbnail

30 Years After Its Release, Nathan McCall’s Makes Me Wanna Holler Still Resonates

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

When journalist Nathan McCall released his 1994 autobiography, Makes Me Wanna Holler: A Young Black Man in America , my mother was among the first wave of people to purchase a copy. She didn’t buy the book for me as a young aspiring journalist who was still in college at the time, although I’m sure she would have. Rather, my mother bought McCall’s book for herself because – like many readers – she was riveted by a report on NPR about McCall’s remarkable foray into the newspaper business after ha

IT 321
article thumbnail

‘Another Unforced Error’ in the FAFSA Fiasco

Confessions of a Community College Dean

The Education Department acknowledged Friday that a calculation error led to inaccurate aid estimates for a sizable portion of student aid forms processed in the past few months. “The FAFSA Processing System (FPS) was not including all data fields needed to correctly calculate the Student Aid Index for dependent students who reported assets,” department officials wrote in an announcement.

Education 133
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Community College: The Right Path and the Right Foot

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Community colleges have the ability to not only put students on the right path, but most importantly, ensure that students begin on the right foot. That right foot has so many implications, the first of which is the financial impact of attending a community college as the first step toward a bachelor ’ s degree. Currently, students are more immediately aware of the return on interest (ROI), and they want to know —up front — the lasting impact of their choices of when and how they engage in highe

article thumbnail

Antisemitism Awareness Program Launched at HBCUs

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Antisemitism Awareness Program Launched at HBCUs Sara Weissman Fri, 03/22/2024 - 03:00 AM Students at South Carolina State University and Voorhees University are learning about antisemitism and the history of Black-Jewish relations as part of a new program.

128
128
article thumbnail

RON PRICE

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Ron Price Ron Price has been appointed vice president of the new Division of People, Culture, and Equity at the College of Southern Maryland. He served as the vice president of human resources and chief diversity officer for Colby-Sawyer College in New Hampshire. Price holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in public administration from the University of Virginia.

article thumbnail

‘To diary or not to diary’? – lessons learned from the SRHE workshop ‘Using Diary Method in Social Research’

SRHE

by Panagiota (Peny) Sotiropoulou At the beginning of February 2024, I attended the in-person workshop on Using Diary Method in Social Research , organised by the SRHE and facilitated by Dr Emily Henderson, Dr Zoe Baker and Dr Ahmad Akkad. Figure 1: Dr Zoe Baker presenting a group task during the workshop As a reflective, life-long learner, I think there is no bigger satisfaction than sharing lessons learned from attending professional development opportunities like this with a wider audience.

Research 113
article thumbnail

HILLARY FOLSOM

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Hillary Folsom Hillary Folsom has been appointed director of advancement and alumni relations at Gadsden State Community College. She served as financial director of, and marketing liaison for, Interfaith Ministries, a regional nonprofit organization focused on the homeless and unsuitably housed. Folsom holds a bachelor’s degree in communications and an MPA from Jacksonville State University.

More Trending

article thumbnail

DIANE RYAN

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Dr. Diane Ryan Diane Ryan has been named vice president for academic affairs at Harford Community College in Bel Air, Maryland. She served as the vice president of academic affairs at Yavapai College in Prescott, Arizona. Ryan earned a bachelor’s degree in mass communications and a master’s in communication studies from Western Illinois University as well as a Ph.D. in community college leadership from Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia.

article thumbnail

UC Board Postpones Vote on Limiting Departmental Statements

Confessions of a Community College Dean

The University of California’s Board of Regents on Wednesday postponed a planned vote on a policy that would prohibit academic departments and other academic units from posting political statements on their website homepages.

108
108
article thumbnail

KRISTEN MILLER

Diverse: Issues in Higher Education

Kristen Miller Kristen Miller has been appointed president of Southern Maine Community College. She served as vice president of academic affairs at White Mountains Community College in New Hampshire. Miller holds a bachelor’s degree in communications and English from Sonoma State University in California, a master’s in education and education leadership from the University of New England in Maine, and a doctorate in higher education leadership from Capella University in Minnesota.

article thumbnail

Embattled Eastern Gateway Community College Set to Fold

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Eastern Gateway Community College, which has struggled financially over the last year, is set to begin dissolving in June unless it receives enough funding. EGCC trustees decided at a Wednesday meeting that unless the community college is able to obtain “sufficient” funding by May 31, it would begin the process of folding on June 30.

article thumbnail

What is The Future of RDs? – A Major Reframe

Roompact

This blog series features different writers responding to the prompt, “What is the future of the RD position and role?” Guest Post by Jeremy Miller, Residence Life Professional What is the future role of the professional called “RD”. When I look at the landscape of opportunity in front of people in my profession, I feel.

article thumbnail

Lincoln President Cleared of Bullying in Administrator’s Death

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Third-party investigators hired by Lincoln University’s Board of Curators found no evidence that university administrator Antoinette (Bonnie) Candia-Bailey, who died by suicide earlier this year, had been bullied by the university’s president, as she had alleged in a 12-page letter to him the morning

article thumbnail

Arizona under pressure over Ashford student loan debt - Paul Baskin, Times Higher Ed

Ray Schroeder

Just as the University of Idaho reaches crunch time for its acquisition of the University of Phoenix, it is getting a major cautionary example from Arizona, where a similar purchase is producing mounting costs and political recriminations. The University of Arizona began working to buy the for-profit Ashford University in 2020 and completed the deal last year.

IT 65
article thumbnail

Providence College Accused of LGBTQ+ Discrimination

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Faculty, students and alumni at Providence College in Rhode Island have accused the administration of “hypocrisy toward and systemic oppression of LGBTQ+ people at PC,” The Providence Journal reported Thursday.

Alumni 103
article thumbnail

Collegiate commentary: Five take-aways from ‘Embedding Enterprise in the Curriculum’ series

Teaching Matters Student Employment

In this post, we share with you the Collegiate Commentary from our latest Teaching Matters newsletter: Five take-aways from the ‘Embedding enterprise in the curriculum’ series. In this commentary, Professor Ross Tuffee discusses the importance of developing “un-employability skills” in student cohorts.

article thumbnail

Library Spaces for Today’s College Student

EdTech Magazine - Higher Education

Today’s college libraries are gathering places as much as they are spots where students come to read. When it came time to renovate Sam Houston State University’s Newton Gresham Library, staff knew that the focus was going to be on a lot more than books. After five decades serving students, the library was ready for an upgrade — and not just in the way its visitors perused their reading material.

article thumbnail

AmeriCorps coaches help to build a brighter, more inclusive future for College Possible students

College Forward

By executive director Deb Salls At College Possible Minnesota, we strive to celebrate the hard work and dedication of our AmeriCorps coaches year-round. March 11-15, 2024, otherwise known as AmeriCorps Appreciation Week, we call special attention to the impact coaches make on the students they serve and the College Possible organization as a whole. AmeriCorps coaches at College Possible provide direct service to students, helping them persist through graduation in numbers that exceed those of th

Alumni 59
article thumbnail

‘I’m devastated’: Hundreds of former fosters may lose state financial aid for college

University Business

Nia Dyer’s dream of graduating college next year is on the line. She’s one of about 645 students receiving state aid to pay for college through the Fostering Independence Grant program — the first of its kind in the nation to cover not only tuition but full cost of attendance of college for Minnesotans who have been in foster care. Read more on MPR News.

article thumbnail

New Presidents and Provosts: Jackson State, Lower Columbia, Nevada State, Northshore Technical CC, Upper Iowa, Yavapai

Confessions of a Community College Dean

New Presidents and Provosts: Jackson State, Lower Columbia, Nevada State, Northshore Technical CC, Upper Iowa, Yavapai Doug Lederman Fri, 03/22/2024 - 03:00 AM Byline(s) Doug Lederman

52
article thumbnail

Two neighboring northwest Ohio universities to merge

University Business

Two smaller northwest Ohio colleges are merging, though the two campuses will remain open. Presidents of the University of Findlay and Bluffton University made the historic announcement on Thursday. Read more on News Talk 1480 WHBC. The post Two neighboring northwest Ohio universities to merge appeared first on University Business.

52
article thumbnail

The Short-Term Costs of Unhealthy Behaviors: Academic Minute

Confessions of a Community College Dean

Today on the Academic Minute: Kaitlin Woolley, associate professor of marketing at the SC Johnson College of business at Cornell University, looks short-term to help us stop unhealthy behaviors.

52
article thumbnail

Lawmakers, experts decry ongoing COVID-19 shot mandates at 48 colleges

University Business

On Tuesday, reports surfaced that 48 colleges across the country continue to require prospective students to receive the COVID-19 shot for admission, almost a year after the pandemic was declared over by Congress. Lawmakers and policy experts are decrying the ongoing mandates as discriminatory, unnecessary, overly burdensome, and potentially dangerous.

article thumbnail

Illegal Dumping: Why You Need A Real Time Solution To Waste

MultiFamily Insider

Introduction: Illegal dumping remains a persistent issue for multifamily residential properties, often overlooked and under addressed. As individuals take advantage of the anonymity afforded by these bustling spaces, property owners face increased costs for dumpster services, including potential penalties for exceeding trash limits. This blog.

article thumbnail

How policymakers, higher ed leaders aim to correctly implement performance-based funding

University Business

Pennsylvania lawmaker and state higher education leaders’ recent nod to performance-based funding has brought the money allocation tool back to the forefront as Texas and Oregon have also agreed to enact similar models for their two-year institutions last summer. While the model has been adopted and discarded across the country since the 1970s, recent guidelines are ensuring its staying power.

article thumbnail

House Panel Advances Anti-‘Political Litmus Test’ Bills

Confessions of a Community College Dean

House Panel Advances Anti-‘Political Litmus Test’ Bills jessica.blake@… Fri, 03/22/2024 - 03:00 AM Democrats call the GOP-sponsored bills an unnecessary attempt to codify rights already protected by the First Amendment that could hinder antisemitism response.

105
105
article thumbnail

President moves: 2 decade-plus leaders step back after a job well done

University Business

Hired Jonathan Alger – American University (D.C.) Following a successful 12-year presidential stint at James Madison University in Virginia, Jonathan Alger is packing his things and moving into D.C. to lead American University. Alger leaves JMU in great shape. He helped double the university’s endowment, raise external research funding by more than 92% in the past four year, earn an R2 Carnegie Classification to R2 and transitioned its athletics program to the FBS as a Division 1 pro

article thumbnail

Bill Seeks Funding Ban for Medical Schools With DEI Programs

Confessions of a Community College Dean

A Republican congressman from North Carolina wants to prohibit federal funding, including student loans, for medical schools with diversity, equity and inclusion-related policies and requirements.

Medical 106
article thumbnail

Biden proposes expanding free community college across the U.S. - Annie Nova, CNBC

Ray Schroeder

President Joe Biden proposed expanding access to free community college across the U.S., and other initiatives to make higher education less costly. In the president’s budget for fiscal 2025, Biden called for increasing the amount of Pell Grants and establishing a “Reducing the Costs of College Fund.” President Joe Biden has proposed expanding free community college across the U.S., and other initiatives to lower higher education costs.