Thursday, April 3, 2025
The impact of Trump's university crackdown
Saturday, March 29, 2025
Columbia University's acting President Shipman is one to watch
Columbia University named Claire Shipman, Board of Trustees co-chair, as acting President effective immediately on March 28, 2025. After a year of turmoil and following one of the most aggressive political attacks on any university in U.S. history, President Shipman is stepping into a very challenging role. Her education and experience are impressive - one of the first female graduates of Columbia College in Russian Studies, a masters graduate from Columbia's School of International Policy and Administration, and a journalist with a distinguished career. It's hard to imagine anyone better prepared for the Columbia Presidency.
What President Shipman's appointment signals is unclear and may never be understood. The third in a line of Columbia's female Presidents who voiced concerns about anti-Semitism at House of Representatives hearings last year, she may be better informed and credentialed to restore Columbia's reputation than anyone on the planet. Republicans said that removing former acting President Armstrong would improve negotiation and change.
The Israel v. Hamas war was the spark that ignited discontent at Columbia. As one of the most prominent Ivy League institutions in the U.S., Columbia's protests were notable in the early days after the Hamas attack "not just because of the scale or visibility of the demonstrations, but because the issues at stake - academic freedom, institutional neutrality, moral responsibility - converged so powerfully there." (quote from Steven Mintz of Inside Higher Education) Adding activism versus administration, stakeholder advocacy, and the tension between ideals and action derived or contrasted with them, results in a mix that made Columbia vulnerable to attack. The mix of all these issues, reflected to varying degrees and examples across broader U.S. higher education, may eventually result in a new mantra "We are all Columbia" among higher education supporters.
Mintz continued, "To understand the depth of this conflict on campus is to confront not only Middle East politics, but also the shifting terrain of higher education itself: how students find meaning, how universities manage pluralism and whether institutions can still be trusted to hold space for hard, honest conversations - without breaking." Shipman's appointment as acting President is significant for Columbia and for broader higher education in the U.S. Columbia will be a place to watch!
Friday, March 21, 2025
Executive Order - Shut it Down
President Trump's threat and campaign promise to move the responsibility for education to state discretion came to fruition with his March 20, 2025, executive order. Although U.S. Presidential action can't undo an act of Congress, Republicans are likely to echo Trump's promises and actions. In fact, legislation designed to take greater control over higher education are already in place.
How dismantling the Education Department will unfold is yet to be determined. Some analysts say that breaking up the Education Department will preserve its programs but change who oversees them. More ominous and general predictions are that systems will be disrupted, student services will be impaired, and federal support of research fractured. The five specific areas where higher education will be impacted are applying for and dispensing grants and loans, students' civil rights, management of grant programs, data gathering on student progress, and general oversight. The irony of Trump moving to shut down the Education Department so quickly after the confirmation of McMahon as its Secretary is that aggressive staff cuts were already underway with little acknowledgement of the impact. Neal McCluskey, Director of the the Cato Institute, said, "We don't know how many people are actually needed to execute (the department's) jobs, and it's time to find out..." Rather than having a plan, it sounds like fire, ready, aim is the model.
The Education Department will be very difficult to dismantle because of legislative mandates that formed it and added to it since it broke out of Health and Human Services. The reduction in staff and elimination of some departments impairs the effectiveness of those who remain in their positions with the Education Department.
Democrats demanded transparency by seeking all documents related to the proposed shut down. The resolution of inquiry filed March 21, 2025, requested memos, emails, and other communication about the reduction in workforce, a move that could impair the ability of the Education Department to fulfill its responsibilities. A specific area of responsibility, student loans, was proposed to move to the Small Business Administration (SBA), which opponents say is a clear violation of the intent of the funding.
Trump's chaos is seen in his business and product failures and in the damage to the U.S. in Trump.1. With the Education Department shut down rationalized by eliminating economic inefficiency, and Musk's project tearing through multiple federal offices, I'm curious who's keeping tab on the inefficiencies racking up as a result of funds wasted on early retirements, staff placed on paid administrative leave while cuts are imposed, and the proliferation of law suits attempting to slow Trump's progress in destroying the infrastructure on which many U.S. citizens relied. What is the ultimate cost of this to be and how much are citizens willing to tolerate?
Friday, March 14, 2025
2025-26 Enrollment predictions
Even in the face of massive turmoil across U.S. higher education as a result of Trump administration criticism, funding cuts, and executive orders, early indications are that applications are up for 2025-26. The 4% rise may partially be the result of increasing use of the common application. However, the increasing number of applications from underrepresented populations and lower socioeconomic backgrounds continues the trend of diversification seen in 2024-25. The 2025-26 applications for underrepresented students rose 12% which contributed to a surprising 5% increase in prospective domestic students versus a proportional 1% decline in international students.
Some predict further decline of international student enrollment as a result of Trump administration threats to deport pro-Palestinian demonstrators and return to the travel bans of his 1st term. The 2024-25 international enrollment is down 11% and more students are being deported across all types of institutions, numbering 50+ by April 7, 2025. The increased peril that they endure from Trump's rhetoric and executive orders is causing some international students to hesitate in their considerations of studying in the U.S. In the face of three hundred current international students' visas being revoked as of March 28, 2025, coming to the U.S. may not be worth the risk. International student advisors are scrambling to respond to fears about Trump's reversal on visas, especially targeting those from Muslim countries.
As we see institutions position themselves to yield the best class possible for 2024-25, Harvard and other elite institutions have begun to commit to tuition free for students with family incomes under certain levels. This kind of strategy can support a diversity focus based on income, which incidentally captures prospects of diverse cultural backgrounds. Dartmouth saw a decline in its applications after returning to a policy of requiring testing of its applicants.
Where these early figures will take U.S. higher education in the coming year will be critical to budgets but could also bring volatility in campus climate. Providing support to all students in the face of chaotic challenges and changes is an area where many campuses, such as American University, may begin to focus. Trump administration dismantling of DEI programs and initiatives and threats to international students that their study visas could be cancelled for participating in campus protests are destined to result in opposition. LGBTQ+ students in Texas expressed concern as a result of the elimination of DEI programs and supports.
Who stands up to oppose is the big question since diversity in peer-to-peer interaction is central to preparing for the multi-cultural environment of the 21st century. Considering the risk for students from diverse backgrounds, it will be interesting to see if white students engage as allies in support of their classroom peers. As students of all backgrounds take stock of what's happening, campus administrators will have to thread the needle of Trump-era controls versus student support and freedom of expression.
Student Affairs NOW started the Current Campus Context podcasts series to help student affairs educators navigate the complicated array of issues ahead. Suggestions in the 2nd episode included advising students as they attempt to discern and express opposition and relating campus issues to broader political eras and movements. Judiciary branch responses to campus issues is essential and, thus far, legal challenges have been successful in blocking the most egregious violations of separation of powers conventions and caselaw.
Friday, February 14, 2025
Is defense of higher education imminent?
My reflections on the 2024 election cycle and Trump's 2nd coming included a lot of gloom and doom. One of the issues that drove the gloom was the seeming lack of push back to Trump's tidal wave of executive orders, a barrage that frequently tests the boundaries of separation of powers as well as the very foundations of the U.S. Constitution. Law suits to challenge Trump's directives are so numerous that Inside Higher Education is tracking them in updates. One of the first challenges to reach the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Trump administration withdrawal of funding to 8 states' grants for DEI teaching training.
The irony of the ACE meeting location could not be more profound - The Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. where musicians and artists are resigning their posts and performers are cancelling appearances in the face of Trump's take-over with cronies in board seats and himself as the chair. Audio of Trump's meeting with the board he installed pledge replacing the "wokey" perspective of the center with something that will be "hot" again, like he has made the U.S. Presidency. The Brookings Institute warned that control of free expression in music and other arts organizations is classic authoritarianism. Trump's take over of the Kennedy Center as well as executive orders that prohibit diversity programs among National Endowment for the Arts and National Endowment for the Humanities puts all arts at risk. Targeting another critical area, J.D. Vance will be in charge of implementing Trump's "Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History," which will include investigating the Smithsonian and National Zoo.
Monday, February 3, 2025
The problem with travel
I've previously reflected on travel on my other blog with the post traveling with a critical perspective. The insights I gained from my own travel and observing others has seeped into some of my published articles and particularly at the recent Leadership Educators' Institute (LEI) conference.
Rick Steves' insights on travel reinforce the insights I've gained through the privilege of travel. The New York Times podcast should be viewed by anyone preparing for travel as a way to inspire courage and curiosity.Observing travel of others, and reflecting on my own decisions revealed an evolving understanding of what travel can mean. My travel started where Steves says most people start - the safe environs of Europe. However, as he says, the more transformational travel experiences were to settings that were very different than his (and my) cultural background in the West. Two of my best stretch-travel experiences were with my youngest daughter, Darbi, when we traveled to Morocco and the second was with Diane when we were guided through the Kerala region of India with Sha as our personal guide. Steves' characterization of travel pilgrimage is so important - seeking to engage with reality by being immersed in things we never expected. As an illustration of his point, some of my favorite travel experiences have involved getting lost or stumbling into a musical event that was not anticipated.
Steves advised travelers to skip all the crowded destinations where tourists clamor to the same spots for their FaceBook and Instagram shots. These are the commercialized places that are typically void of any real historical artifacts. He advised finding a way to put yourself in the places where there are real people and engaging with them in direct human encounter.
While I don't judge others' motivations or experience in travel, I've come to the belief that any travel in the future for me will be shaped by intention, preparation and a critical perspective. In order to achieve that, I've committed to travel that signals curiosity and humility, preserves natural resources, and adds to, rather than detracting from, the welfare of local people and preserves culture.
Thursday, January 16, 2025
A good life for all
I often reflect on the good life that I've been privileged to have and wondered how I got here. I've actually begun to compose a life story that charts the experiences and events of my family's life that resulted in my two brothers and me having dramatically different lives, yet each including purpose and fulfillment and ultimately a life well lived.
Higher education philosophers and luminaries have long characterized one of its primary purposes being to help students learn about, and acquire habits to be successful in pursuing, a good life. As contemporary educators move through the current period of skepticism about higher education's effectiveness, with its disparity in outcomes across institutions, cultural groups, and socio-economic statuses, some way of understanding where we've fallen short is imperative. And if you are wondering what "fallen short" means, the State of the Nation report provides ample evidence and specifics. The report asserts that, while the U.S. has become increasingly wealthy, life expectancy and key quality of life elements have declined in comparison to other advanced countries.
Steve Mintz of Inside Higher Education recently posted two thought pieces that captured my imagination. The first was an opinion on how the erosion of meaning and connection has undermined achieving a happy and good life for many in the contemporary age. Mintz cites classic authors who blamed "consumerism, technological advancement, careerism and hyperindividualism" as having eroded aspiration for and achievement of meaning and happiness. Countering the preoccupation with work and loss of leisure and community ties can be achieved by "fostering engagement with nature, community and the arts."
Drafting these simple points from Mintz' first article felt elitist in many ways. After all, who really is able to escape preoccupation with work and pursue more leisure and community ties other than the elites of most communities? Especially in the face of his second article, one focused on the shift in understanding racism and violence, it is clear that prejudices and systems of oppression are in place to make sure that not all people have access to the good life. Inequality, hate, and prejudice may seem to be new but have been debated by scholars for over a century - proof that the systems are entrenched in ways that are difficult to challenge. Sustaining these systems is fortified by legacies of colonialism, capitalism and racial inequality, and neocolonialism