Education News

MPR News keeps track of the latest education news in Minnesota so you can understand the events shaping the future of learning and how it impacts students at any level.

Stay informed about local education events, policies and more happening in schools and colleges across Minnesota.

How the job market looks for the class of 2011
Found this off a tweet by John Lawlor of The Lawlor Group. Bearing out Tim Post’s recent report on an upswing in hiring?
Victory For Veterans: G.I. Bill Legislation Clears Final Hurdle Tens of thousands of student veterans attending private colleges on the Post-9/11 G.I. Bill cleared the final hurdle in an ongoing battle to secure promised tuition dollars. (The Huffington Post) Western Michigan University spends $2 million to buy rival bookstore Western Michigan University is spending $2…
“Historically, the education industry benefitted in a bad economy, because people went back to school. That helped in 2008 and 2009, but now many potential students are averse to taking on debt for school. And the fact that unemployment has been so high for so long is weighing on enrollments for the whole industry.” —…
In case you missed it this morning, Kerri Miller talked jobs and college students on her Midmorning program. Here’s the intro: As unemployment remains high, there is also a mismatch between the skills of many workers and unemployed and available jobs. How well are colleges preparing students for today’s job market? Has the recession changed…
How St. Cloud State will lure tech students
“It is going to provide a facility to attract students from all over the world. They are going to want to come to St. Cloud and work in a state-of-the-art facility to prepare for careers all over the world.” — State Sen. John Pederson, R-St. Cloud, who authored the Senate bill for St. Cloud State…
New MnSCU magician's plan to boost grad rates
MPR’s Tim Post caught incoming Chancellor Steven Rosenstone trying to hypnotize students at Metropolitan State University in St. Paul yesterday. No idea yet whether his method works.
Bowdoin Says No Need for SAT While Buying College Board Scores Colleges from Bowdoin in Maine to Pitzer in California dropped the SAT entrance exam as a requirement, saying it favors the affluent, penalizes minorities and doesn’t predict academic success. What they don’t advertise is they find future students by buying names of kids who do well…
Do colleges adequately prepare students for the job market?
As unemployment remains high, there is also a mismatch between the skills of many workers and unemployed and available jobs. How well are colleges preparing students for today's job market? Has the recession changed the learning focus?
Inspired, perhaps, by University of Minnesota President Eric Kaler’s appearance on today’s Midmorning program, MPR readers had no lack of answers to Today’s Question: What change would you most like to see at Minnesota’s public colleges and universities? Many centered on cost-cutting efforts and tuition, but a number hit on curriculum, standards and instructors. Here…