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Rural high school students are more likely than city kids to get their diplomas, but they remain less likely to go to college

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Written by: Sheneka Williams, Michigan State University
Published: 03 January 2026

A high school junior looks over a farm where he works in Perry, N.Y., in March 2025. Lauren Petracca/Associated Press

Many high school seniors are currently in the midst of the college application process or are already waiting to hear back from their selected schools.

For high school students in rural parts of the United States, the frantic pace of the college application process can look a bit different. For starters, some of these rural students might not have large numbers of elite universities and colleges coming to admissions fairs in their areas. They might not have all of the required high school courses to attend some of these schools, either, according to Sheneka Williams, a scholar of educational leadership and rural education who graduated from a small, rural high school in Alabama.

Amy Lieberman, the education editor at The Conversation U.S., spoke with Williams to understand the particular experiences of rural students – and what, exactly, coming from a rural background can mean as students think about college.

How are rural high school students’ experiences unique?

Nationally, nearly 10 million students – or 1 in 5 public school students in the U.S. – attended rural schools in the fall of 2022.

Research suggests that rural students finish or complete high school at a higher rate than urban students.

While approximately 90% of rural high school students graduated in 2020, 82% of urban high school students got their diplomas that year.

But rural students’ college entrance rate is lower than that of urban and suburban students.

Within four years of graduating high school, 71% of rural students attended college, compared to 73% of suburban and 71% of city students who also went to college, according to 2023 findings by the National Center for Education Statistics.

Why are rural students finishing high school at a higher rate than their suburban and urban peers but attending college at a lower rate?

First, we know that some colleges are not really recruiting students in rural areas. If these universities don’t know you exist, and if your parents haven’t gone to college and don’t know how the admission system works, you might not have help as you move closer to attending college. Some rural schools also do not have college counselors.

There are other reasons why some rural high school graduates are not going to college, I have personally seen. Some students are apprehensive about leaving home. They have close-knit families and communities, and they might be wondering where they fit in at a school in a large place that is much bigger than where they grew up.

A group of young people wear red shirts and hold musical instruments, including trumpets, as they walk in the street on a blue-sky day.
Students in the West Bolivar High School marching band take part in the McEvans School homecoming parade in Shaw, Miss., in September 2022. Rory Doyle for The Washington Post via Getty Images

Do any of these scenarios describe your own educational journey?

I grew up in a small town in Alabama and was different from some of the other Black students, since I came from a family of educators who had gone to college for two generations.

But when I did go to college, I went to a campus that was two times the size of my hometown, which has a population of just 12,000. It takes a confident student, as well as encouragement from parents or mentors, to believe that you can go to school away from home.

We had some college fairs in high school, but the visiting colleges were state universities and regional schools. You did not have selective schools coming to recruit.

Students today can learn about schools online, but there is still the issue that universities are not, on their own, connecting enough with rural students.

Do rural students fit into universities’ diversity goals?

Only recently have people begun to think and talk more about what rural really means. Some people use the U.S. Census Bureau’s definition of rural, which is “all population, housing, and territory not included within an urban area.”

But that’s a somewhat surface definition. It’s hard for some scholars to agree on what counts as rural, including me. It feels like something you have to experience and know, and that is hard to define. Part of the issue is that rural has been defined by what urban is not, and that makes it seem it doesn’t deserve its own definition.

Universities are beginning to think about these rural students more and the particular challenges they experience in school. That includes not necessarily having stable access to high-speed internet, which approximately 22.3% of Americans in rural areas and 27.7% of Americans in tribal areas don’t have, compared to only 1.5% of Americans in urban areas.

Another issue is that even for rural students who want to go to college, they might not have the right qualifications, such as certain courses they have completed.

I am currently involved in research with sociologists Barbara Schneider and education scholars Joe Krajcik and Clausell Mathis about how some rural high schools in Alabama and Mississippi aren’t able to teach physics or chemistry. Physics and chemistry are both gateway courses to college, and if you want to be an engineer or STEM major, you have to complete these courses in order to have a shot at certain colleges.

Rural high schools tend to have a lack of resources, in terms of both budget and their staffing. Schools not being able to find teachers who are qualified or certified in certain subject areas, such as science courses, is a nationwide problem. But this issue is tougher in smaller, rural towns.

Schools will say they don’t have students interested in those subjects. But the states also aren’t requiring that these classes are offered.

This lack of science course offerings can create a whole block of students who are not going to college. And if we are talking about the South, in particular, and states that have a high population of Black students in rural areas, we are talking about a whole swath of students who don’t have this education and would find it a struggle to get into larger, splashier schools that are not near home.

A scoreboard and old-looking building are seen in a brown field.
High school students in rural areas might not have access to the same classes or technology that peers in suburban and urban areas do. iStock/Getty Images Plus

What do you think are some of the solutions to these challenges?

There are many local efforts to offer tutoring and things of that nature for rural high school students. Some of those efforts have been blunted because schools are funded by property taxes, and some of them just don’t have the revenue to pay for these add-ons without federal support.

I think colleges need to do a better job of recruiting students at rural high schools. I also think that once these students make it to college, it would help if there were support or affinity groups.

Some colleges have not thought enough about rural students. I think the narrative around rural students and college needs to shift – these students may want to go to college, but nobody is looking for them. When you live in small, geographically isolated places, sometimes you only know what you see.The Conversation

Sheneka Williams, Professor of Educational Administration, Michigan State University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 New laws to strengthen consumer protections and wildfire resilience go into effect

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Written by: Lake County News Reports
Published: 03 January 2026

Beginning Jan. 1, nine new laws — sponsored by Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara and the California Department of Insurance — went into effect, with the goal of delivering stronger consumer protections for all Californians.

These new laws establish a wildfire safety grant program, expand insurance discounts, speed up claim payouts for wildfire survivors, extend non-renewal protections to businesses, strengthen the financial stability of the FAIR Plan, and modernize outdated insurance laws to improve transparency and accountability.

“The recent wildfires in Southern California exposed deep weaknesses in a 30-year-old framework of insurance regulation and enforcement. These new laws are part of a broader solution to put consumers in command by giving them more options, more transparency, and faster recoveries on their own terms,” said Commissioner Lara. “Protecting consumers is my top priority. I am grateful for the continued partnerships with the Governor and state legislators who helped champion these important measures.”

The following laws will go into effect on Jan. 1, unless otherwise noted.

Wildfire safety

• The California Safe Homes Act (AB 888), authored by Assembly Member Lisa Calderon, protects homes and access to insurance by establishing a new grant program within the Department of Insurance to assist qualifying residents in obtaining new or replacement fire-safe roofs and implementing fire-safe mitigation measures within five feet of their homes — known as “Zone Zero.” This program will cover part or all the costs and will be included in community-wide safety initiatives.

These mitigation measures are among the most impactful yet costly, and homeowners have consistently communicated their desire to undertake this work but lack the financial means. The California Safe Homes Act will help provide financial assistance for these essential projects.

• The California Wildfire Public Model Act (SB 429), authored by Sen Dave Cortese, enhances community safety and education by allowing the Department of Insurance to issue grants for establishing the nation’s first publicly available wildfire loss catastrophe model. The public model will facilitate assessments of wildfire risk, educate the public, and ensure greater transparency so communities and homeowners can plan effectively. This new law builds on recommendations from the Cal Poly Humboldt-led Public Wildfire Model Strategy Group.

• The Insurance and Wildfire Safety Act (AB 1), authored by Assembly Member Damon Connolly, enhances insurance discounts by requiring the Department of Insurance to regularly review its groundbreaking Safer from Wildfires regulations, ensuring this law reflects advancements in science, safety, and mitigation. This regular review will ensure that these regulations meet the needs of consumers and the industry, providing maximum benefits to homeowners and essential support to communities most vulnerable to wildfires.

Consumer protection

• Eliminate “The List” Act (SB 495), authored by Sen. Ben Allen, requires insurance companies to pay 60 percent of contents coverage limits, capped at $350,000, to wildfire survivors who experience a total loss without needing to submit a detailed inventory list. It also grants consumers at least 100 days to provide proof of loss to their insurance company following a declared state of emergency. Furthermore, the new law will establish specific data collection authority to help the Department of Insurance understand long-term trends in risk management and the integration of information related to climate-driven risks that significantly impact insurance availability.

• The Business Insurance Protection Act (SB 547), jointly authored by Senators Sasha Renée Pérez and Susan Rubio, builds on the Wildfire Safety and Recovery Act of 2018 (SB 824, authored by then-Senator Lara), which has protected millions of homeowners by prohibiting non-renewals of residential property insurance for one year. This new law extends this existing protection by broadening the insurance moratorium to now include commercial policies, covering businesses, homeowners’ associations, condominiums, affordable housing units and nonprofits, among other covered entities.

• The FAIR Plan Stability Act (AB 226), jointly authored by Assembly Members Lisa Calderon and David Alvarez, enhances consumer safeguards by allowing the FAIR Plan, if authorized by the Insurance Commissioner, to access catastrophic bonds through the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank and enter into a line of credit or loan agreements with one or more lenders. This new law provides additional financial support for the state’s insurer of last resort, ensuring timely payment of consumer claims in the event of a major disaster.

• Annual Insurance Omnibus (AB 487), authored by the Assembly Insurance Committee, clarifies existing law, removes outdated code sections, and establishes new laws developed in collaboration with the Department of Insurance and stakeholders. It benefits the Department and Californians by improving clarity, efficiency, and fairness in regulation.

Health care

• Increasing Consumer Protections in Student Health Insurance (AB 594), authored by Assembly Member José Luis Solache, allows students who are no longer enrolled at a university to withdraw from their health insurance coverage and cease paying premiums, makes changes regarding notices that must be given to schools and students when an insurer wants to increase its rates, and institutes a penalty if insurers fail to timely file their rate changes with the Department of Insurance. This new law will go into effect on July 1, 2026.

• Infertility Treatment Health Care Coverage (SB 729), authored by Sen. Caroline Menjivar, requires insurance coverage for fertility and infertility care under disability insurance policies and large group health plans. This protects Californians’ access to in-vitro fertilization (IVF), and updates the definition of infertility to be inclusive of LGBTQ+ family planning experiences, despite any federal action to limit this coverage. This law applies to large and small group health care service plan contracts and disability insurance policies issued, amended, or renewed on or after the bill’s implementation dates. As signed by the Governor in 2024, SB 729 was to take effect on July 1, 2025, but an enacted California State Budget trailer bill delayed implementation to Jan. 1, 2026. For CalPERS, the mandate begins on July 1, 2027.

Space News: NASA’s Hubble reveals largest found chaotic birthplace of planets

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Written by: NASA Hubble Mission Team, Goddard Space Flight Center
Published: 03 January 2026
This Hubble Space Telescope image shows the largest planet-forming disk ever observed around a young star. It spans nearly 400 billion miles — 40 times the diameter of our solar system. Image: NASA, ESA, STScI, Kristina Monsch (CfA); Image Processing: Joseph DePasquale (STScI).

Astronomers using NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope have imaged the largest protoplanetary disk ever observed circling a young star. 

For the first time in visible light, Hubble has revealed the disk is unexpectedly chaotic and turbulent, with wisps of material stretching much farther above and below the disk than astronomers have seen in any similar system. Strangely, more extended filaments are only visible on one side of the disk. 

The findings, which were published Tuesday in The Astrophysical Journal, mark a new milestone for Hubble and shed light on how planets may form in extreme environments, as NASA’s missions lead humanity’s exploration of the universe and our place in it.

Located roughly 1,000 light-years from Earth, IRAS 23077+6707, nicknamed “Dracula’s Chivito,” spans nearly 400 billion miles — 40 times the diameter of our solar system to the outer edge of the Kuiper Belt of cometary bodies. 

The disk obscures the young star within it, which scientists believe may be either a hot, massive star, or a pair of stars. And the enormous disk is not only the largest known planet-forming disk; it’s also shaping up to be one of the most unusual.

“The level of detail we’re seeing is rare in protoplanetary disk imaging, and these new Hubble images show that planet nurseries can be much more active and chaotic than we expected,” said lead author Kristina Monsch of the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian, or CfA. “We’re seeing this disk nearly edge-on and its wispy upper layers and asymmetric features are especially striking. Both Hubble and NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope have glimpsed similar structures in other disks, but IRAS 23077+6707 provides us with an exceptional perspective — allowing us to trace its substructures in visible light at an unprecedented level of detail. This makes the system a unique, new laboratory for studying planet formation and the environments where it happens.”

The nickname “Dracula’s Chivito” playfully reflects the heritage of its researchers — one from Transylvania and another from Uruguay, where the national dish is a sandwich called a chivito. The edge-on disk resembles a hamburger, with a dark central lane flanked by glowing top and bottom layers of dust and gas.

Puzzling asymmetry

The impressive height of these features wasn’t the only thing that captured the attention of scientists. The new images revealed that vertically imposing filament-like features appear on just one side of the disk, while the other side appears to have a sharp edge and no visible filaments. This peculiar, lopsided structure suggests that dynamic processes, like the recent infall of dust and gas, or interactions with its surroundings, are shaping the disk.

“We were stunned to see how asymmetric this disk is,” said co-investigator Joshua Bennett Lovell, also an astronomer at the CfA. “Hubble has given us a front row seat to the chaotic processes that are shaping disks as they build new planets — processes that we don’t yet fully understand but can now study in a whole new way.”

All planetary systems form from disks of gas and dust encircling young stars. Over time, the gas accretes onto the star, and planets emerge from the remaining material. IRAS 23077+6707 may represent a scaled-up version of our early solar system, with a disk mass estimated at 10 to 30 times that of Jupiter — ample material for forming multiple gas giants. This, plus the new findings, makes it an exceptional case for studying the birth of planetary systems.

“In theory, IRAS 23077+6707 could host a vast planetary system,” said Monsch. “While planet formation may differ in such massive environments, the underlying processes are likely similar. Right now, we have more questions than answers, but these new images are a starting point for understanding how planets form over time and in different environments.”

The Hubble Space Telescope has been operating for over three decades and continues to make ground-breaking discoveries that shape our fundamental understanding of the universe. Hubble is a project of international cooperation between NASA and the European Space Agency, or ESA. NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope and mission operations. Lockheed Martin Space, based in Denver, also supports mission operations at Goddard. The Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, conducts Hubble science operations for NASA.

Flood watch, wind advisory issued for Lake County through Sunday

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 02 January 2026

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The National Weather Service has issued a flood watch and wind advisory for Lake County through the weekend due to incoming storms.

The flood watch is in effect from 4 p.m. Friday through 10 p.m. Sunday, while the wind advisory lasts from 1 p.m. Friday through 4 p.m. Saturday.

Forecasters said there will be rain and mountain snow, along with gusting winds and the potential for thunderstorms across Northern California through Monday. 

The forecast calls for south winds of up to 25 miles per hour and gusting winds up to 60 miles per hour in northern Lake County. 

Rainfall totals through Monday could reach nearly 3 inches, according to the forecast.

After Monday, chances of rainfall are expected to lessen but to continue through Thursday.

Daytime temperatures through the weekend will hover in the low 50s, dropping into the high 40s at the start of the week.

Nighttime conditions into next week will be in the high 40s, dropping into the high 30s.

The rainy conditions over the past week have given Clear Lake a boost. 

The United States Geological Survey’s gauge on Clear Lake shows that since the day after Christmas, the lake’s depth rose from 4.27 feet Rumsey, the special measure for the lake, up to 5.11 feet Rumsey by early Friday morning.

On Jan. 2, 2025, Clear Lake’s level was at 5.90, according to USGS historical records.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, and on Bluesky, @erlarson.bsky.social. Find Lake County News on the following platforms: Facebook, @LakeCoNews; X, @LakeCoNews; Threads, @lakeconews, and on Bluesky, @lakeconews.bsky.social. 

  1. California homeowners could qualify for grants for new roofs and fire safety
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