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.

Which majors are the most attractive to employers
Looks like the bean counters and geeks get all the love. According to The Huffington Post, the National Association of Colleges and Employers asked employers which degrees they valued most. Below is a lost of the top six, along with the percentage of responding organizations that would hire graduates with that major. Accounting: 62 percent…
“If you decide to go to Bates, I’ll be there with you through the whole process next year.” — Bates College “swing dean” Michael M. Martinez in the Chronicle of Higher Education on what he tells those he recruits. Martinez is one of two Bates officials who do multicultural admissions one year — and then…
University Mergers Sweep Across Europe Countries hope that creating larger, more diverse institutions will improve their research and, yes, their rankings, too. (chronicle.com) At 2 Texas Campuses, Faculty Buyouts Create Staffing Headaches The flagships will save about $18-million after more than 100 professors leave early, but they are also scrambling to adjust their teaching rosters.…
Slideshow: U of M alumni New Year message
Nice little year-round look at the U — You mean spring, summer and fall exist? — with a few New Year’s greetings thrown in.
A very quick look at MN higher-ed budget numbers
Here’s a quick take by the Pioneer Press’ Bill Salisbury on Minnesota higher education and the state budget. Notice the last line. It’s not new stuff, but it’s interesting to see what comes of it. Minnesota’s two higher-education systems want more money from the state over the next two years. The University of Minnesota will…
This Chronicle of Higher Education blurb may blunt the stereotype of the doddering old history professor: Only about 21 percent of current full-time faculty members listed in the association’s Directory of History Departments, Historical Organizations, and Historians are over the age of 64, and an additional 18 percent are over the age of 54, the…
Mary Churchill of Queens College laments how seldom professors — who are paid to teach — actually talk about teaching: We don’t talk much about teaching in academia, and that’s a problem. Our silence makes it difficult for junior faculty and others teaching their first courses to raise issues and ask questions. Teaching is rarely…
Military complains of undereducated candidates
The U.S. Army via Flickr You’ll need better education if you want to wear one of these. On Campus tries to stray on occasion into non-academic post-high-school options — not just college. And we’ve often read about the business community’s input in education discussions, how it says education needs to change to provide the work…
U of Minnesota student mag sees societal blur
A magazine production class in the University of Minnesota’s journalism school is making ambiguity the theme of its magazine, Blur. It’s the culmination of a semester’s worth of student work — what the U calls “an investigation of the blurring lines between culture, food and music in today’s society.” Available both online and on paper…
Catherine Rampell of the New York Times says taking classes or training while unemployed and looking for a new career is not as common as some might think, according to what she’s seen in a recent report: The fact that so many of those who have found new work are changing careers may lend credence…