The Association of African Universities, the African Union Commission and the European Union have issued a call to African universities to join the second phase of their Harmonisation and Tuning initiative. Read more...
More universities called to join Tuning Africa
New fund to help jobless graduates set up businesses
By Kudzai Mashininga. Zimbabwe has established a fund for university graduates to start businesses to help stem the country’s high employment rate, currently pegged at 90%. Most graduates end up on the streets, with some even resorting to vending as Zimbabwe’s economic crisis deepens. Read more...
Local universities perform well in QS subject rankings
By Munyaradzi Makoni. South African institutions have performed well in the new QS – Quacquarelli Symonds – World University Rankings by Subject 2015. There are seven of the country's universities in the ranking, South African institutions cumulatively appear 15 times among the top 100 across the disciplines and the University of Cape Town is seventh globally in development studies. Read more...
Academics urge reform of university leader selection
By Tunde Fatunde. Developments in the selections of vice-chancellors and councils in public universities have not gone down well with members of Nigeria’s Academic Staff Union of Universities. Many believe the selection process and behaviour of some vice-chancellors and council members have weakened autonomy and strengthened government’s hold on public universities. Read more...
US$250 million US-Egypt higher education initiative
By Wagdy Sawahel. Under the US-Egypt Higher Education Initiative, the US will provide up to 1,900 scholarships and exchanges to Egyptians in five scholarship components and in strategic fields that it is hoped will contribute to Egypt’s economic prosperity. Read more...
Security chiefs ignored intelligence on Garissa attack
By Wachira Kigotho. Almost a month after al-Shabaab Islamist militants stormed Garissa University College and killed 148 people, Kenya’s government has admitted that there was actionable intelligence that the college would be attacked – but security chiefs ignored the threat. Read more...
Is the growth of elite world-class universities fuelling inequality?
By Brendan O’Malley – Managing Editor. This week in our Commentary section Simon Marginson explores the link between wealth and access to the upper reaches of higher education and calls for mass education to be shored up through government guarantees and funding mechanisms. Ly Tran and Catherine Gomes say overuse of stereotypes of international students as victims, cheaters or permanent residence hunters is harming Australia’s attempts to create an inclusive intellectual and intercultural environment for all students. Patrick Prendergast asks what has to be done to ensure research in Europe is supported in ways that can promote the development of innovative products and the engagement of entrepreneurs.
In our World Blog, Hans de Wit says the relationship between academic disciplines and internationalisation of the curriculum is poorly understood.
In Features, Brendan O’Malley looks at the lessons learned from the investigation into mistreatment of workers during the construction of New York University’s Abu Dhabi Main Campus. Wachira Kigotho explores the constraints on agricultural research in Sub-Saharan Africa, and Paul Rigg reports on a rural Spanish town that has attracted academic attention for its unique use of urban art to drive its economic growth. Read more...
Kenyan security chiefs ignored intelligence on planned university attack
By Karen MacGregor – Africa Editor. In Africa News, Wachira Kigotho reports on security failures ahead of the al-Shabaab massacre of students at Garissa University College and, also in Kenya, Maina Waruru finds harsh penalties facing people who breach the law in forging international degree programme collaborations. Tunde Fatunde writes about academic discontent over vice-chancellor and university council selection processes and appointments in Nigeria.
In Africa Features, Wachira Kigotho finds progress in building capacity and investment in agricultural research in Sub-Saharan Africa, but also serious constraints.
In Commentary, Simon Marginson explores the link between wealth and access to the upper reaches of higher education and calls for mass education to be shored up through government guarantees and funding mechanisms.
Ly Tran and Catherine Gomes say overuse of stereotypes of international students as victims, cheaters or permanent residence hunters is harming Australia’s attempts to create an inclusive environment for all students. Patrick Prendergast asks what has to be done to ensure research in Europe is supported in ways that can promote the development of innovative products and the engagement of entrepreneurs.
And in World Blog, Hans de Wit says the relationship between academic disciplines and internationalisation of the curriculum is poorly understood. Read more...
Scientists achieve critical steps to building first practical quantum computer
By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Scientists achieve critical steps to building first practical quantum computer
Unattributed, Phys.org, 2015/05/01
This is pretty interesting. To create a stable quantum computer, you have to simultaneously detect for two types of error, bit-flip and phase-flip errors. This article describes a quantum computer that can detect both simultaneously. More...
Some Assembly Required: STEM Skills and Canada’s Economic Productivity
By Stephen Downes - Stephen's Web. Some Assembly Required: STEM Skills and Canada’s Economic Productivity
The Expert Panel on STEM Skills for the Future, Council of Canadian Academies, 2015/05/01
The arguments around the make-up of Canada's education system continue (there's a surprising lack of consensus which is either a precursor to a national policy, or an argument against one). More...