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  <title>Higher Education 2026 Planning and Lessons Learned from 2025 Predictions</title>
  <description>Higher education enters 2026 under conditions that are no longer hypothetical. In this 8th annual end-of-year episode of the Changing Higher Ed® podcast, Dr. Drumm McNaughton is joined by Tom Netting of TEN Government Strategies to review how the predictions made at the end of 2024 played out during the 2025 operating year and what those outcomes mean for institutional planning in 2026. Rather than offering speculative forecasts, this episode uses 2025 as a calibration year. When predictions materialize, they remove ambiguity. They clarify which pressures are structural, which risks persist, and which leadership assumptions are no longer defensible. For presidents, boards, and senior leadership teams preparing for 2026, this conversation provides a grounded planning context based on conditions already in motion. Topics Covered   What 2025 confirmed about federal policy instability, accountability, cost pressure, enrollment volatility, and governance risk   Why the Department of Education is likely to remain in place through 2026 and why its continued existence should not be mistaken for stability   How redistribution of authority across federal agencies increases compliance complexity for institutions   Where student loans are likely to move within the federal system and why institutions face growing exposure to borrower outcomes   Why broad student debt forgiveness remains unlikely and what limited relief options may realistically emerge   How accountability is shifting toward program-level scrutiny and the implications for academic realignment   Why accreditation reform remains unsettled and why leaders should treat accreditation as a strategic risk factor   Workforce Pell expansion, quality oversight challenges, and the risk of fraud and abuse in short-term credentials   The growing role of states in accountability as federal capacity contracts   Research funding as political leverage and the planning risk created by funding uncertainty   Polarization as an operational challenge affecting enrollment, safety, governance, and public trust   Technology, AI, cybersecurity, and NIST compliance as board-level responsibilities   Enrollment, demographic decline, cost escalation, and financial pressure entering the 2026 planning cycle   Mergers, closures, and structural collaboration as necessary adaptation strategies   Key Planning Judgments for 2026   The Department of Education will persist but continue to shrink and fragment   Student loans will move further away from the Department, increasing institutional exposure   Accountability pressure will intensify, particularly at the program level   Accreditation reform will remain unresolved beyond 2026   Workforce Pell will expand, bringing both opportunity and heightened oversight risk   Research funding will remain politically vulnerable   Cost pressure will continue to drive consolidation and closures   Technology and cybersecurity will demand sustained leadership attention   This episode is especially relevant for presidents and trustees navigating compressed decision timelines, thinner margins for error, and declining tolerance for ambiguity. The focus is not prediction for its own sake, but clarity about the forces institutions must plan around as they enter 2026.  #HigherEducation&amp;amp;nbsp;#HigherEd2026StrategicPlanning #HigherEducationPodcast </description>
  <author_name>Changing Higher Ed</author_name>
  <author_url>https://changinghighered.com/changing-higher-ed-podcast/</author_url>
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