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7 juillet 2013

Open Education as Bildung

http://www.irrodl.org/public/journals/4/pageHeaderTitleImage_en_US.pngMarkus Deimann (FernUniversitaet in Hagen, Germany) and Robert Farrow (The Open University UK). Abstract
Despite the recent increases of interest in open education, notably in massive open online courses (MOOCs) (Fini, 2009), it has been continuously asserted that this form of social knowledge production lacks a philosophical or theoretical foundation (Vandenberg, 1975). Similar accusations have been made with respect to distance education, such as being slow to engage with critical debates in theory and research (Evans & Nation, 1992). In a similar vein, Danaher, Wyer, and Bartlett (1998) claim that researchers in open and distance learning tend to draw on too narrow a range of theoretical resources in their research. Given the considerable rise of open education over recent years, these critical appraisals urge us to expand theoretical approaches and refine our understanding of evolving pedagogical and technological relations (cf. Bell, 2011). In this paper, we contribute to debates surrounding open education and open educational resources by introducing the concept of Bildung (self-cultivation, self-realization) as a powerful reflective tool and framework for approaching open education. We will elaborate on the potentials of Bildung by reviewing the history of the concept and exploring the extent to which Bildung can provide open education with a theoretical framework. Our focus is not exclusively on open educational resources (OER): We follow other commentators (Mackey & Jacobson, 2011, p. 62; cf. Weller, 2011) who argue that ‘openness’ in education necessarily shifts the focus from content (OER) to practices (OEP) that are necessary for the use of that content. Read more...
7 juillet 2013

Lessons from a mooc: learning is not a competition

http://solefulfran.files.wordpress.com/2013/07/mooc.jpg?w=333&h=230By . Last week I signed up for my first ever MOOC – massive open online course – through the amazing online learning website Coursera. For anyone looking for something to keep them occupied over the summer, I would highly recommend checking it out. I spent my first few minutes on the website just marvelling at the idea of being able to learn whatever I wanted, from whatever university I wanted, all from the comfort of my own bed (surely that is most university students’ dream!). Read more...
7 juillet 2013

On the MOOC Challenge to Traditional Higher Education

http://profile.ak.fbcdn.net/hprofile-ak-frc3/373025_30719304648_221297124_q.jpgBy . In a recent Minding the Campus essay, Benjamin Ginsberg, professor of political science at Johns Hopkins, worries about Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs). Ginsberg is no softy about higher education. He has written a hard-hitting book on “administrative bloat,” the result of colleges and universities putting resources into management at the expense of instruction and research. But he is worried about MOOCs, which permit “one professor [to] lecture to tens or even hundreds of thousands of students with whom he or she has no interaction.”
In case you haven’t heard, MOOCs are online courses that enroll, typically free of charge, students who listen to lectures, do interactive, graded exercises, and engage in discussion forums. MOOCs are hailed as disruptors of a self-satisfied, overpriced higher education system and denounced as overhyped, poor substitutes for genuine education, which requires face-to-face teaching, mentoring, and discussion. Read more...

7 juillet 2013

Youth spending report finds student debt is exploding

http://www.bdlive.co.za/template/common/images/logos/businessday.gifBy Colleen Goko. STUDENT debt is exploding amid revelations that South African university students can legally acquire credit cards as long as they can prove that they receive a steady income of as little as R200 a month from a parent or a guardian.
A recent youth spending report by Student Village and Unisa found that student debt has more than doubled in the past three years, with 43% of students admitting to owning a credit card in the 2012 survey, compared to 9.5% in 2010. Read more...
7 juillet 2013

Higher education worldwide evolves amid Great Recession

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/wp-content/themes/jt_theme/library/img/logo-japan-times.pngBy Justin Pope and Didi Tang. Determined to learn their way out of the Great Recession — or eager to rise above the deprivation of developing lands — unprecedented millions of people have enrolled in colleges and universities around the world in the past five years. What they’re finding is an educational landscape turning upside down. In the United States — where top schools have long championed a liberal style of learning and broad education before specialization — higher education’s focus is shifting to getting students that first job in a still-shaky economy. Tuition is so high and the lingering economic distress so great that an education not directly tied to an occupation is increasingly seen as a luxury. Read more...
7 juillet 2013

Graduates' job prospects depend on where they went to university... and Oxbridge students don't do as well as you'd think

MailOnline - news, sport, celebrity, science and health storiesBy Sarah Harris. A fifth of students are unemployed six months after graduating from some British universities, figures show. Amid stiff competition for graduate jobs, they fail to get work despite studying for three years and building up debts.
The chances of landing a job vary considerably between institutions. Fourteen universities have unemployment rates above 15 per cent. Read more...
7 juillet 2013

Postgrad support boosted as numbers fall

Times Higher EducationBy . The government has announced a fund worth up to £125 million to support disadvantaged students into further study, as a new report reveals postgraduate numbers fell last year. The Department for Business Innovation and Skills and the Higher Education Funding Council for England said today that an initial £25 million fund will distribute grants of between £500,000 and £3 million to universities and colleges to attract and support disadvantaged students into postgraduate study. Read more...
7 juillet 2013

Graduate vacancies at five-year high, suggests research

http://static.bbci.co.uk/frameworks/barlesque/2.48.3/desktop/3.5/img/blq-blocks_grey_alpha.pngBy Judith Burns. Graduate vacancies at major UK employers are at their highest since 2008, new research suggests.
The UK's 100 "leading employers" have 4.6% more jobs for new graduates than in 2012, High Fliers Research said.
But its study of the 2013 graduate market said there were still an average 46 applicants for each position.
Last month the Higher Education Statistics Agency said it believed 10% of UK students remained unemployed six months after graduating in 2012.
The latest study suggests that the rise in vacancies for graduates is higher than expected.
Earlier this year, the same group of employers predicted that graduate vacancies would increase by 2.7%. Read more...
7 juillet 2013

Higher Education Brings Few Guarantees

http://s0.2mdn.net/viewad/1447902/3-97x70_cm_hdr_subscribe.pngBy . Almost 7 million college graduates will pour into China’s job market this year, but a large proportion will struggle to find suitable work. When Sam Gu was admitted to college four years ago, his parents were ecstatic. His father, an electric welder, and his mother, a cleaner at a hotel in Gu’s hometown of Wuxi, a small city near Shanghai, hoped that their son would vault into the middle class. But the family’s first college graduate is facing a grim job market in a country that desperately needs to employ its best and brightest in order to avoid social instability and trigger a further economic slowdown. “I want to get a job, but the reality is that I do not know where I can find one,” says Gu. “As far as I know, none of my 45 classmates has found a job. This is so frustrating.” Read more...
7 juillet 2013

Up to £15m in tuition fees 'lost' to English universities

http://i2.walesonline.co.uk/news/article4306007.ece/ALTERNATES/s148/WalesOnline-Live-logo-4306007.jpgBy . New figures reveal the Welsh Government’s controversial tuition fee policy is ploughing up to £15.3m into five universities in England. The Welsh Government’s controversial tuition fee policy is ploughing up to £15.3m into five universities in England, figures uncovered by the Welsh Conservatives have revealed.
Data compiled by leader of the opposition Andrew RT Davies shows that based on the potential tuition fee subsidy of £5,500, as much as £15.3m could be lost to the top five most popular universities alone. A Freedom of Information request found that Bristol, Bath, Exeter, Liverpool and Chester take the most Welsh-domiciled students and the universities currently have 2,778 undergraduates enrolled. A decision to subsidise Welsh students wherever in the UK they choose to study currently costs the Welsh Government up to £5,500 per student, who continue to pay in the region of £3,500. Read more...
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