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30 mars 2013

Attract the best students? Canada won’t even buy a glass of water

Go to the Globe and Mail homepageBy Mel Broitman. The Harper government boasts that foreign students brought $8-billion into the Canadian economy in 2010. When you consider what’s at stake, and the federal government’s goal to double the international student intake by 2022, it borders on the absurd to think that in promoting Canadian education abroad, the Canadian government is short of funds to serve a glass of water. Such is the way Canada frequently presents itself as an international student recruiter. This was on display recently when the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade held a major Canadian education promotion event in Lagos, Nigeria, in January. Read more...
30 mars 2013

Most parents don’t know total cost of sending child to university

Go to the Globe and Mail homepageBy Lu Ann La Salle. The cost of a four-year university degree for a child born in 2013 could rise to more than $140,000 due to tuition inflation, a new study says. But three-quarters of parents with children under 18 haven’t made a detailed estimate of the total cost of post-secondary education, said BMO’s Wealth Institute in a report released on Wednesday. Tuition and other costs for a four-year university degree now can cost more than $60,000, the report said. Read more...
30 mars 2013

Limits on research lead to ‘bonsai’ universities

By Roger Moore. The draft letter of expectation that the provincial government recently sent to the University of Alberta is great cause for concern for those who value the benefits of research. Research is essentially an assembly line: at the forefront there are fundamental researchers extracting the raw knowledge about the nature of the universe. These knowledge breakthroughs are then refined and processed by applied researchers to create the technological breakthroughs that industry then takes and uses to create devices and processes that increase our standard of living. If this were the oil industry, applied research would be a refinery and basic research would be the prospectors and drillers who find, extract and feed the crude oil to the refinery. Nobody would ever suggest that we stop prospecting and drilling for oil and focus purely on refining, because once the existing reserves ran out, the refinery would shutdown. Read more...
30 mars 2013

Harvard Asks Graduates to Donate Time to Free Online Humanities Class

New York TimesBy RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA. Alumni of elite colleges are accustomed to getting requests for money from their alma mater, but the appeal that Harvard sent to thousands of graduates on Monday was something new: a plea to donate their time and intellects to the rapidly expanding field of online education. For the first time, Harvard has opened a humanities course, The Ancient Greek Hero, as a free online class. In an e-mail sent Monday, it asked alumni who had taken the course at the university to volunteer as online mentors and discussion group managers. Read more...
30 mars 2013

How to save money on university reading

http://bathknightblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/telegraph-logo.jpgBy David Ellis. Whether you're an e-book convert or loyal to old-fashioned tomes, what's really important is keeping the costs down at university says David Ellis. Lately, there’s been conjecture over the increasing prominence of academic e-books and the concurrent decline of the traditional paper-and-ink variety. Personally, I prefer the physical version – eReaders just aren’t sturdy enough when you require a few extra inches of height to grab a suitcase upon a wardrobe, or to kiss someone taller.
Still, I’m convinced the potential of e-books mean their weightless presence will be felt in all lecture theatres before too long. Argument here is academic, though – most students are more concerned with making the most financially efficient use of all available resources, whatever the format. Read more...
30 mars 2013

Student financial support: do you know what is available?

http://bathknightblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/telegraph-logo.jpgBy Liam Burns, NUS President. Financial hardship support is available for university students, but reductions to the funding pot are cause for concern says Liam Burns.
Politicians and commentators often obsess over the number of people going into higher education, but forget that getting through a university’s door is just the start of the story. But we should be equally concerned about who can stay the course and make it through to the other side - it’s surely a self-defeating waste of public money, and talent, if a student is set up to fail and then has to drop out simply because they can’t make ends meet. I’ve spent a fair bit of time over the past few weeks examining the evidence from ourPound in Your Pocketresearch project on the financial pressures on students and their impact on individual wellbeing - not least the imperative to balance work and study in order to make ends meet, to avoid financial bailouts and to access postgraduate education. Read more...
30 mars 2013

University leaders paid £250,000 a year as students fees are tripled

http://bathknightblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/telegraph-logo.jpgBy Graeme Paton. University vice-chancellors were paid almost £250,000 on average last year, just as they prepared to impose a huge rise in student tuition fees. Research shows that the institutions’ leaders saw their pay and benefits increase by more than £5,000 on average in 12 months. The highest-paid was Prof Andrew Hamilton, of Oxford, whose overall package stood at £424,000 in 2011/12 – the final academic year before a near tripling of student fees. It was almost three times the Prime Minister’s salary of £142,500.
Prof Les Ebdon, the director of the Government’s Office for Fair Access, was awarded a £32,000 increase in the final year of his previous post in charge of Bedfordshire University. It took his salary and benefits there to £280,000 – more than the £271,000 paid to the vice-chancellor of Cambridge. Read more...
30 mars 2013

Students will defend need for traditional learning

Times Higher EducationBy Chris Parr. Many students will “defend to the death” the need for traditional campus-based lectures, and will only delve into the world of free online educational resources if instructed to by their teachers, a conference has heard.
Toni Pearce, National Union of Students vice-president for further education, and one of the candidates to become the new president, challenged the perception that students were increasingly turning to the web for their education, and in doing so overlooking more traditional campus-based learning. Read more...
30 mars 2013

The supposed value of a humanities degree from Harvard?

http://www.senseworlds.com/wp-content/themes/Aspire/Aspire/images/crack.jpgThe supposed value of a humanities degree from Harvard?
OMG…this was my first thought on reading this article “Harvard Asks Alumni for Help With Humanities MOOC” published in yesterday’s Chronicle of Education. [I've just read it as I'm a little behind in my reading.]  Wow is my response….and I’d agree with  ssaulvolk, one of the commentators on the article called who wrote 10 hours ago “Good news for adjuncts who thought they were at the bottom of the academic barrel! Harvard has come up with an even lower category. Kudos to the university with the GNP-sized endowment.”
YES! Clearly Humanities graduates either need to be underpaid, undervalued and they are cheap i.e. free for service. What Harvard has indirectly stated is that people with degree in the humanities have little or no value. Why? Well, they’re clearly willing to work for nothing according to Harvard!! One has to wonder what value does a PhD in the humanities have? Clearly, not much. Way to go Harvard in setting the bar for the manner in which people with Humanities PhD and degrees ought to be treated. You’d hope that perhaps the university would be far more politer, less judgmental to its faculty and students, and alumni but obviously they’re’ worthless. If this is the case…what about the rest of us??  (I didn’t get my PhD from Harvard just in case you’re wondering.)
30 mars 2013

Online Rx for 'Cost Disease'

HomeBy Ry Rivard. Universities must slow the rising cost of higher education or risk losing the support of the American public, the president emeritus of Princeton University, William Bowen, argues in his new book. To do that, college administrations should turn to online courses to combat the “cost disease,” a term explained several decades ago by Bowen, a labor economist. The disease is simple: higher education prices are hard to bring down because labor prices rise while productivity remains the same. Bowen says that in academe, like a string quartet, there’s traditionally been little chance for colleges to reduce the number of laborers or the time it takes to finish the work. The cure, Bowen writes, may be online education. He argues online education can reduce costs without undermining students’ education. While he goes out of his way to make sure nobody thinks online education will be a silver bullet, Bowen's argument is likely to receive attention because of his time at Princeton and at ITHAKA studying new technologie. The book, Higher Education in the Digital Age (forthcoming from Princeton University Press), frames the current and coming debates instead of answering questions about the future of online learning. About a third of students now take at least one class online. Read more...
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