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22 mars 2016

Israeli society calls for boycott of Ariel University

A group of over 1,000 Israeli sociologists announced last week that they will sever all academic ties to Ariel University "since it is not located in Israeli territory”, reports The Jerusalem Post. Read more...

22 mars 2016

Government funds studies on making rain in the desert

By Mannoura Egaiz. The United Arab Emirates is to fund three research teams from around the world to work out how to make it rain over the Arabian Desert. Read more...

18 mars 2016

Private ELT tuition in high demand in Egypt, says report

By Natalie Marsh. High value is placed on private tutoring for English language in Egypt, according to a recent report, due to the fairly low quality of the state education system, presenting opportunities for international providers to engage with the country. More...

18 mars 2016

Lack of regulation hits higher education in RAK

NationalLogoBy . A lack of proper regulation governing the setting up of universities and an emphasis on investment instead of educational quality in Ras Al Khaimah’s free zones means students are paying for worthless degrees and graduating with qualifications that are not recognised. More...

18 mars 2016

Imagine, a Minister of Youth Who’s Actually Young

Résultat de recherche d'images pour "foreignpolicy.com"By David Rothkopf. In the midst of the Mideast’s chaos, one country has become a laboratory for producing exciting new ideas about the future of governance. More...

14 mars 2016

US universities paid $400 million a year to run branches

The total annual bill for six prominent US universities to run branches in the wealthy Arabian emirate of Qatar comes to more than US$400 million, writes Nick Anderson for The Washington Post. Read more...

14 mars 2016

Prime minister cuts short speech after student protest

By Jane Marshall. Morocco’s Prime Minister Abdelilah Benkirane had to abandon a speech at the HEM Business School in Oujda when students in the audience interrupted him with boos and protests against brutality by police who had beaten up demonstrating trainee teachers. Read more...

14 mars 2016

Academic freedom in Egypt: We need justice for PhD student killed in Egypt

ESU - European Students' UnionGiulio Regeni, a 28 years old Italian PhD student at the University of Cambridge, has been killed in Egypt while conducting researches for his thesis.
Regeni was a PhD student at Girton College of Cambridge. He was born in Fiumicello (Udine), in Italy, where he started his studies. After living for some years in Trieste as a high school student, he won a grant and completed school in New Mexico. He then moved to University of Leeds, where he graduated in “Arabic and Politics” and decided to go to Cambridge for a Master in Development and a PhD at the Department of Politics and International Studies. For research purposes, he moved to Egypt in order to study the actions of the Egyptian Worker Unions and other movement engaged in the fight against the regime of al-Sisi.
Giulio Regeni disappeared in Cairo on the 25th of January, 2016, at 8 pm while he was going from Behoos Station to Midan Babellouk. Only a couple of hours after he was last seen, the campaign #whereisGiulio? spread on social networks - nobody knew where he could be and authorities themselves were denying arresting him or even having been in contact with him. At the same time, Italian national newspapers were referring to the 2015 report of Human Rights Watch, saying that thousands of arrested people in Egypt have completed disappeared: in some cases somebody reappeared, after a long time, in jail but the large majority was not found anymore. In any case, all of those who disappeared were somehow related to the opposition to the Egyptian President, Abd al-Fattah al-Sisi.
On the 4th of February, 2016, Regeni’s dead body was found and the news spread rapidly. The first newspaper reporting it, the Egyptian “Al Watan”, said the dead body of a young man was found in a ditch in Cairo. It was a naked body with visible signs of torture.
Giulio has been tortured to death: the autopsy made in “La Sapienza”, in Rome, revealed he was beaten up, having all thumbs broken, the nails teared away, seven broken ribs, signs of electric shocks to his genitals, razor cuts all over his body, his nose and ears mutilated, huge cigarettes’ marks and a cerebral hemorrhage.
International media are actually stuck on two different positions: some believe Giulio was killed by the security service of Abd al-Fattah al-Sisi because of his research on the activity of the Egyptian leftist movement in opposition to the Government; others, mainly Egyptian media, believe that he was killed by secret service agents, close to the Muslim Brotherhood, who did so to create problems to the Egyptian Government.
What we know, for sure, is that Giulio has been killed because of his research activity. His murder was a direct attack to academic freedom, showing once again how Education is the scariest threat to all kind of regimes.
Giulio was a young man willing to better understand the world. He knew the dangers of his research but decided to continue anyways, not only for himself but for all of us, just like every scholar does on his or her field of studies.
We need justice for Giulio. More...
11 mars 2016

Factors that impact student usage of the learning management system in Qatari schools

International Review of Research in Open and Distributed LearningIn an attempt to enhance teacher and student performance in school, a learning management system (LMS) known as Knowledge-Net (K-Net) was introduced in Qatari independent schools. (All public schools in Qatar have transformed to independent schools; the independent schools model is similar to the charter school system in North America.) An LMS is a tool that organizes and regulates classroom administrative tasks, supports teachers and students in the teaching and learning process, and informs parents of their children’s progress and school activities. More...

7 mars 2016

Universities should cut majors not in demand – Official

Universities should close down or admit fewer students into disciplines with which the civil service is oversupplied, according to the head of the agency responsible for public sector employment, writes Laila Azzeh for The Jordan Times. Read more...

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