Recent federal moves could spark more support for studentsâ basic needs and expand the teaching pipeline. ADVERTISEMENT [The Edge Logo]( Did someone forward you this newsletter? [Sign up free]( to receive your own copy. Iâm Goldie Blumenstyk, a senior writer at The Chronicle covering innovation in and around higher ed. This week I am back [from some time off]( sharing my reactions to several recent news developments. Iâll also pass along some thinking on new models for accreditation and student aid. ADVERTISEMENT SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE Enjoying the newsletter? [Subscribe today]( for unlimited access to essential news, analysis, and advice. Boosts for studentsâ basic needs and for the teaching pipeline. Three actions tied to the federal government caught my attention in the past few weeks. One may ease burdens for low-income students. Another could help surface new models for teacher preparation. Both of those goals are crucial right now. The third development, however, made me wince a little as it reminded me how the pause on student-loan payments has undermined one of the governmentâs only college-accountability measures. 1. In conjunction with last weekâs White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health, an organization that helps connect people to government resources announced it would release a tool kit in early 2023 specifically for higher-education institutions to identify students who are likely to be eligible for food assistance, Medicaid, and the new Affordable Connectivity Program, which provides $30 a month toward internet service. The organization, Benefits Data Trust, says its [tool kit]( could be useful in helping colleges guide students through the complexities of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. Pre-pandemic, an estimated two million college students were eligible for but not participating in SNAP â a gap the group attributes to confusion about eligibility on the part of students and their institutions The conference also prompted several calls for reform, including [a proposal from New America]( to scrap altogether the SNAP provisions that create so many hurdles for college students to qualify. 2. With so much attention lately on [the teacher shortage]( in the United States (also on [the myth of the teacher shortage]( Iâve been eager to learn more about approaches like apprenticeships and residencies to expand the pipeline into the field. So I was excited to see last weekâs announcement by the U.S. Department of Education of [$60-million in grants]( to more than a dozen colleges and organizations developing alternative pathways into teaching. Iâm interested in programs like these because the traditional pathway â majoring in education â has narrowed. Education was once the most popular college major (OK, that was in the early 1970s), but in the 2020 academic year, only about 85,000 (or 4 percent) of two million undergrads finished college with that major. That means a nearly 20-percent decline over two decades, according to [the Pew Research Center](. 3. The first week in October is usually when the Education Department releases its official calculations on student-loan default rates, the proportion of borrowers who have defaulted on their loans in the previous three years. This year was no exception, but the latest figures are especially misleading. Nationally, [the official default rate is 2.3 percent]( a huge decrease from 7.3 percent a year ago, which was itself a decline from the year before. But of course, since March 2020, no borrowers have been required to make a payment, so the metric doesnât really tell us anything about borrowersâ ability to repay their loans. [I wrote in April]( this pause â however welcome for borrowers â was undermining one of the few (if imperfect) tools the government has to assess how colleges have served students. We (still) need alternatives. Maybe the publication of this asterisked data will stimulate further discussion. Check these out. Here are some education-related items from other outlets that recently caught my eye. Did I miss a good one? [Let me know](mailto:goldie@chronicle.com). - New college models are needed but they also necessitate new approaches to accreditation, the entrepreneur and education-reform advocate Stig Leschly argues in [this essay]( published by the American Enterprise Institute. âNew accreditors should operate with a steely insistence on economic-mobility outcomes,â he writes. âThey should hold startup colleges clearly accountable for producing high graduation rates, strong short-term earnings outcomes, and low net costs.â
- President Bidenâs student-loan forgiveness âcreated a ticking time bomb for fundamental reformâ of higher education, Kevin Carey, of New America, [writes]( in Slate. The first step should be for the federal government to âditch its one-size-fits-all grant and loan system,â he says, âand split the program in three: one for short-term, job-focused credentials; one for traditional undergraduate degrees; and one for graduate and professional school.â
- The number of youth apprentices nationally more than doubled in the past decade, but racial and gender disparities persist, according to data analyzed by Jobs for the Future and [reported]( by Work Shift. The analysis found disparities in both participation and wage benefits once apprenticeships end. While men more than doubled their wages after completing apprenticeships, women didnât come close to that â in part because they disproportionately entered fields like pharmacy tech and early childhood education that pay much less than male-dominated fields like construction.
- New and pre-existing state requirements could undermine studentsâ access to the polls this fall, so the American Council on Educationâs updated [issue brief]( âHow Colleges Can (and Canât) Support 2022 Campaign Activities on Campus and Help Students Vote,â should be a welcome guide. For example, a number of states do not accept student IDs at polling places, or have restrictions such as requiring student ID cards to be signed or issued within the past two years. The brief highlights collegesâ responsibilities to promote voting and voter education, as well as the limitations they face on partisan political activity. Got a tip youâd like to share or a question youâd like me to answer? Let me know, at goldie@chronicle.com. If you have been forwarded this newsletter and would like to see past issues, [find them here](. To receive your own copy, free, register [here](. If you want to follow me on Twitter, [@GoldieStandard]( is my handle. Goldieâs Weekly Picks MAKING THE CASE [The Return of College as a Common Good]( By Karin Fischer [STORY IMAGE]( Americans increasingly see the public value of higher education. Can colleges seize the moment? STUDENT-DEBT RELIEF [For Bidenâs Loan-Forgiveness Plan, a Flurry of Lawsuits, a Rollback, and a New Sticker Price]( By Adrienne Lu [STORY IMAGE]( It was a busy week for the presidentâs unprecedented program, which will cancel up to $20,000 in debt for borrowers meeting income requirements. Hereâs what you need to know. DATA [Some High-School Grads Say No to College. Hereâs Why â and What Might Change Their Minds.]( By Audrey Williams June [STORY IMAGE]( Nearly 40 percent of respondents to a new survey said cost was the main barrier keeping them from college. But they also said money alone wasnât the answer. ADVERTISEMENT FROM THE CHRONICLE STORE [Building a Faculty That Flourishes]( [Building a Faculty That Flourishes]( Colleges and universities cannot be successful without vibrant and engaged faculties. Now is the time to figure out sustainable ways to recruit, support, and diversify the faculty. [Order your copy today.]( NEWSLETTER FEEDBACK [Please let us know what you thought of today's newsletter in this three-question survey](. This newsletter was sent to {EMAIL}. [Read this newsletter on the web](. [Manage]( your newsletter preferences, [stop receiving]( this email, or [view]( our privacy policy. © 2022 [The Chronicle of Higher Education](
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