Canalblog
Suivre ce blog Administration + Créer mon blog
Formation Continue du Supérieur
20 février 2014

University councils to downsize

3 News - News from New ZealandBy Sarah Robson. The Government's decided to go ahead with plans to make university councils smaller and remove the requirement to have staff and student representatives on them. Tertiary Education Minister Steven Joyce says the changes will modernise councils and allow them to react quickly and more strategically. The current limit of between 12 and 20 members will be reduced to between 12 and eight, and specific representative requirements will be removed, making council membership more flexible. Mr Joyce says it'll be up to universities to decide whether they include student representatives on their councils. Read more...

20 février 2014

Student visa system fraud exposed in BBC investigation

BBCBy Richard Watson. The Home Office has suspended English language tests run by a major firm after BBC Panorama uncovered systematic fraud in the student visa system.
Secret filming of government-approved exams needed for a visa shows candidates having tests faked for them.
ETS, which sets the exams but does not appoint the invigilators, told Panorama it "does everything it can to detect and prevent" cheating.
Home Secretary Theresa May said the BBC's evidence was "very shocking".
Panorama saw candidates for tests set by ETS, one of the largest language testing firms in the world, being replaced by "fake sitters" and having answers read out to them. More...

20 février 2014

Involving students in quality assurance

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Fernando Miguel Galán Palomares. The QUEST for Quality for Students project, run by the European Students’ Union, has analysed student views on the quality of higher education and identified areas in which students can become increasingly involved in quality assurance and enhancement processes. A research team worked hard on this project for three years and presented the final outcomes on 31 October 2013. The findings have been published in four research publications and one handbook that can all be downloaded for free on the project websiteMore...
20 février 2014

Belarusian universities getting ready to join Bologna Process

Belarusian universities are getting ready to joint the Bologna Process, First Prorector of the Belarusian State University (BSU) Mikhail Zhuravkov told reporters before the opening of the international seminar Erasmus Mundus as a catalyst for internationalisation: sharing best practices and exploring future perspectives. The seminar is taking place in the BSU on 10-12 February, BelTA has learnt.
“I am convinced that Belarus will join the Bologna Process in 2015. The country has been getting ready for it for a long time already. No doubt, all our students are looking forward to it. In order to join the Bologna Process, our universities have to comply with certain requirements, like teaching disciplines in English, new courses for foreign students, etc. Now we have plans to introduce new inter-discipline courses in English,” Mikhail Zhuravkov said. More...

20 février 2014

North Korean Crackdown on Private Education Overlooks Real Issue

http://www.rfa.org/rfa_resources/footerlogoaddress.pngA commentary by Andrei Lankov. Private education began booming in North Korea some 10 years ago and has led the country’s elite, foreign currency earners, and even jangmadang (local market) merchants to pay to educate their children. Music, computers, and foreign languages such as English have been the most popular courses, but other private courses are offered as well.
Over this period, private tutors have earned good money helping their students earn good grades, but it is unclear whether such private education can continue. The North Korean authorities are reportedly conducting heavy crackdowns against providers and receivers of private education. More...

20 février 2014

Massive open online forces

The rise of online instruction will upend the economics of higher education.
UNIVERSITIES have not changed much since students first gathered in Oxford and Bologna in the 11th century. Teaching has been constrained by technology. More...

19 février 2014

By the masses – The emergence of crowd-funded research

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Lucas Walsh, The Conversation. This time of year sees many academics furiously submitting grant applications to the Discovery Projects scheme of the Australian Research Council, or ARC. While prestigious, they are time-consuming and highly competitive. In the social, behavioural and economic sciences category, only 23.2% of the 714 submissions considered were successful in 2013. More...
19 février 2014

An unsustainable education model

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Ranjit Goswami. In India, it has suddenly become fashionable to talk about the poor global rankings of higher education institutions. In the three widely referred to global university rankings of 2013 – those of Shanghai, QS and Times Higher Education – India had no institution among the top 200. Only one Indian institute figured in the Shanghai ranking’s top 500 and just five were among the top 400 in both the QS and THE rankings. More...
19 février 2014

Erasmus+ – What is new for higher education?

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Jordi Curell. Erasmus+ entered into force on 1 January 2014. It covers the different education sectors ranging from school to adult education as well as youth non-formal learning. As such, the new programme offers more opportunities for higher education to work with partners in the other education and youth sectors. Its budget of €14.7 billion (US$20 billion) plus €1.68 billion for international actions in the area of higher education – referring to actions involving individuals and institutions from non-European Union countries – represents a rise of over 40% compared with the previous programmes. More...
19 février 2014

Rising unemployment – Are there too many graduates?

http://enews.ksu.edu.sa/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/UWN.jpgBy Yojana Sharma. Fast growing East Asian economies have rapidly increased the numbers of students attending university in recent years. Now the pool of unemployed graduates is rising to worrying levels in the region generally – and even in some high-growth economies. Of particular concern is whether high graduate unemployment is a temporary blip or reflects a chronic oversupply of graduates, even as many employers say they cannot find people with the right skills. More...
Newsletter
49 abonnés
Visiteurs
Depuis la création 2 783 885
Formation Continue du Supérieur
Archives