Artwork stating 'Education Destroys Barriers', 'We Demand Treatment', and 'I Need A Chance'

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  • To support underserved students, four-year universities offer two-year associate degrees

    Arrupe College offers two-year associate degree programs in smaller classes and at significantly lower costs on the Loyola University campus. At Arrupe College, 50% of the students graduate, and 70% of graduates continue to earn their bachelor’s degrees. With the help of the nonprofit Come To Believe Network, several four-year universities across the country are also beginning to offer two-year programs.

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  • Meet Students at 4 Colleges Where Gaza Protests Win Concessions, Incl. Considering Israel Divestment

    To advocate for divestment from companies supporting Israel’s war on Gaza, students have mounted protest encampments at universities across the United States, including Rutgers University in New Jersey. Though Rutgers students were not able to achieve full divestment, the administration agreed to begin discussing divestment and met their demands to welcome more Gazan students to the school, hire additional professors of Palestinian studies, and establish an Arab cultural center on campus.

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  • How today's antiwar protests stack up against major student movements in history

    As tensions surrounding the war in Gaza mount, university student protests have the power enact change, much like the anti-apartheid protests of the 1980s. Following student protests of the South African apartheid, 155 universities divested from firms that supported or profited from the apartheid and in 1986 the U.S. government enacted a divestment policy.

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  • Northwestern University's deal with student protesters offers example of successful negotiations

    After students mounted a protest encampment calling for Northwestern University to divest from companies profiting from the Israel-Hamas war, protest organizers negotiated with university officials and agreed to discontinue the encampment in exchange for the creation of an advisory committee to review the university’s investments. The agreement also includes commitments to build a house on campus for Muslim student activities and to raise funding for scholarships for Palestinian students.

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  • 'Transformative': More college programs are slowly coming into prisons

    The United States Department of Education made federal Pell Grants available to college students who are incarcerated to help cover school expenses. This spurred the development of new prison education programs and partnerships with colleges.

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  • After UT Austin protest crackdown, Houston students push limits of free speech

    As campus free speech is under fire, university student groups like Students for Justice in Palestine are pivoting their protesting and organizing efforts to continue sharing their message while still following university policy. By creating encampments that are technically art installations, students evade university free speech restrictions while still managing to protest.

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  • More public colleges admit high schoolers even before they've applied

    Some public universities are sending acceptance letters to students who meet certain academic criteria before they apply to college in an effort to fill college rosters in the face of declining high school populations. These “direct admissions programs proactively reach out to students to let them know what their next steps are if they want to attend college, eliminating the need for fees and complicated applications and helping make higher education more accessible.

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  • As Climate Change Intensifies Wildfire Risk, Prescribed Burns Prove Their Worth in the Heat-Stressed Plains of the Texas Panhandle

    Private landowners in Borger, Texas, are hiring certified burn managers to do prescribed burns on their land that remove excess vegetation and help prevent wildfires. The landowners are legally liable for any issues that may arise and front the initial cost, but they can be reimbursed by the Texas A&M Forest Service, which is working to encourage adoption of the practice.

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  • Michigan program recycles pacemakers to save lives overseas

    Project My Heart Your Heart recycles pacemakers from deceased cardiovascular patients to give them to people overseas living in poor countries where pacemakers are historically hard to access and afford. The My Heart Your Heart lab has received around 50,000 pacemakers and has reconditioned and implanted about 500 in heart patients in several countries.

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  • From school theory to real-world projects: Initiative empowers young Nigerians in tech

    Maha Technologies is a recruitment agency that pairs tech companies with skilled talent, particularly for women and girls in the startup sector. Maha Technologies helps those in STEM secure jobs while also fostering continuous learning, growth and skill-building through mentorship programs and training sessions.

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