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Tennessee College-Going Rate on the Rise
![A female student sits on her bed wearing headphones taking notes during an online class.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-06/insta_photos%20istock%20getty%20images%20plus%20online%20learning.jpg?itok=-Qm-tBQ7)
Supporting Online Student Engagement With Course Design
Institutions developing programs for online learners should consider student opinions about course material and delivery to promote student success, according to a new report from McKinsey & Company.
![A close-up of a human hand holding a magnifying glass over a sea of words, with the word "HUMANITIES" magnified.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-06/GettyImages-186244182%20%283%29.jpg?itok=eUJcMUPO)
The Humanities Aren’t Hurting Everywhere
With all the doom and gloom, it’s a miracle any student majors in the humanities—but at places like Lehman College, they are, Karin Beck writes.
![Richard K. Miller, an older light-skinned man with gray hair, glasses, and a mustache.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-06/rick%20miller.png?itok=3g8Ijbd9)
The Long View on Transformative College Experiences: Key Podcast
A new coalition aims to embed into curricula experiences that develop student agency and purpose and improve their well-being decades later.
![Navajo Technical University president Elmer Guy and Wafa Hozien, university academic administrator, stand together smiling at a campus event celebrating the new Ph.D. program. Both are wearing colorful Native prints.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-06/DSC01911.jpg?itok=zbKnLs3a)
A New Ph.D. Program Fulfills an Old Dream
Navajo Technical University will become the first tribal university to offer a Ph.D. program this fall. Tribal college and university leaders are celebrating the move.
![A group of disengaged, bored-looking students—one resting her head on her hand, and another with their head on the desk—in a university lecture hall.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-05/GettyImages-847311278.jpg?itok=w_gPELR7)
Students Are Less Engaged; Stop Blaming COVID
As “digitally evolved knowledge workers,” our students engage differently than the generations before them; as educators, we need to adapt, Jenny Darroch writes.
![Nate Johnson, founder of FreeWriters, and three incarcerated students in orange uniforms stand around a table covered in papers.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-05/Copy%20of%20A9C75A21-3A82-4B97-9D7F-674DC3387CA6_1_105_c.jpeg?itok=S0XWFbAO)
A ‘Neglected Population’
While college-in-prison programs are poised to expand, some educators and advocates worry prospective students in jails are getting left behind.
![Four incarcerated students stand in front of a mural of the Blue Mountain Community College logo at Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution.](/sites/default/files/styles/image_205_x_203/public/2023-05/637103812187900000.jpg?itok=LvKlirH5)
A Cost-Saving Measure Raises Concerns for Incarcerated Students
Blue Mountain Community College will no longer run G.E.D. programs at local prisons. Campus leaders say the program isn’t cost-effective. Faculty members are concerned students’ education will be disrupted.
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