National Student Clearinghouse Report finds that college transfer enrollment declined in fall 2022

March 20, 2023

DIVERSE ISSUES IN HIGHER EDUCATION — Fall transfer enrollment remains in decline in 2022, albeit at a slower rate than before, according to a new report from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center. The Transfer and Progress Fall 2022 Report – released on Thursday– serves as a redesign of the research center’s two primary transfer reports,

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A look at college transfer enrollment trends

March 20, 2023

HIGHER ED DIVE — The pandemic’s effects continue to scramble college enrollments — particularly on the transfer side. Between fall 2020 and 2022, transfer enrollments fell nearly 7%, according to the latest data from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center.

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Proposed federal budget would increase funding for Pell Grants, HBCUs, and community colleges

March 20, 2023

AMERICAN COUNCIL ON EDUCATION — ​President Biden released his budget request for FY 2024 last week, which includes $90 billion in discretionary funding for programs at the Department of Education. Most notably, the budget contains a request for an $820 increase in the Pell Grant award, which would take the maximum grant from $7,395 to $8,215

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Video: New York credit counselors offer advice on student debt repayment

March 20, 2023

SPECTRUM NEWS — As the Biden administration’s student loan forgiveness program remains in limbo, debt counselors are offering advice for managing debt. Noelle Carter, president and CEO of Parachute Credit Counseling (formerly Consumer Credit Counseling), said for as long as loan payments remain in forbearance, wait it out. Pay down other debts in the meantime. “I think

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New guidelines could make it easier to discharge student loans in bankruptcy

March 20, 2023

YAHOO!LIFE — While certain student loan borrowers can use the bankruptcy process to have their loans discharged, the process has been very cumbersome — but this might change thanks to new guidelines.

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How colleges are responding to the use of ChatGPT by students

March 13, 2023

THE CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION — It’s hard to believe that ChatGPT appeared on the scene just three months ago, promising to transform how we write. The chatbot, easy to use and trained on vast amounts of digital text, is now pervasive. Higher education, rarely quick about anything, is still trying to comprehend the scope

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Opinion: Students in graduate programs need access to career mentors

March 13, 2023

INSIDE HIGHER ED — Collectively, we must move the needle to make career exploration and development an integrated part of the grad student and postdoc experience.

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More than half of university provosts support long-term contracts as alternative to tenure

March 13, 2023

INSIDE HIGHER ED — A small majority of provosts (52 percent) would favor a system of long-term contracts over the current tenure system, according to the 2023 Survey of College and University Chief Academic Officers, published today by Inside Higher Ed and Hanover Research.

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How universities can preserve academic freedom amid educational censorship bills

March 6, 2023

HIGHER ED DIVE — For the last few years, state elected officials have begun “intruding” into colleges’ operations and curricula choices, ACE and PEN America argue. Legislators and other state leaders have attempted to clamp down on subjects such as those related to race, gender and LGBTQ issues with restrictions affecting K-12 schools and colleges.

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US Supreme Court to hear case on proposed federal student loan forgiveness

March 6, 2023

USA TODAY — President Joe Biden said Wednesday that he’s “not confident” how the Supreme Court will rule on his plan to wipe away $400 billion in student loan debt. “I’m confident we’re on the right side of the law,” he told reporters as he was leaving the White House. “But I’m not confident about the outcome

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