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23 juin 2013

1970s: 1 professor, 12 students - 2013: 1 professor, 22 students

Go to the Globe and Mail homepageBy Julia Christensen Hughes. Over the last year, much has been written about the future of the university, particularly concerning jobs, tuition rates and funding. Even as enrolment numbers continue to climb and post-graduation employment rates are still strong, universities have been criticized for their lack of direct focus on job preparation and the cost of a university education. At the same time, mounting budgetary constraints have resulted in the need for universities (like so many other sectors of society) to do more with less while meeting increasing accountability expectations. Read more...
23 juin 2013

To close the gender gap, make other jobs sexy

By David Kent. When I was in the early stages of my undergraduate degree, I thought long and hard about doing an MBA in combination with science. It seemed to me that the sector was underdeveloped in Canada and good science training was going to be essential to a successful career. I was motivated to go out and create products that were useful for people and make money while doing so. That was circa 2001 and, upon reflection, I believe that my science mentors from 3rd year undergraduate onwards steered me away from the biotech industry repeatedly and uncompromisingly – demonizing such careers as “selling out” or “not real science.” To be fair, I am quite happy with where I ended up and the scientific mentoring I have received along the way has been incredible, but some part of me wonders how much of a demographic shift in science training could be achieved if the impressions left on young minds were different. Read more...
23 juin 2013

MOOCs, Access, and Privileged Assumptions

By Melonie Fullick. Later this week I’m going to be on a panel about the inescapable subject of MOOCs, so for this post I’m thinking through an issue I’ve been noticing since I last wrote a big post on this topic, which was during the peak of the media mayhem in July 2012. For many of those researching higher education, even those who’ve been doing it for just a few years as I have, the ongoing hyperbolic MOOC debate that has hijacked the higher ed news has been quite frustrating. Of course, there is plenty of bluster on both sides of this debate. But it’s really troubling to see many perfectly legitimate criticisms reduced to straw-person arguments about “faculty fear“ (“those teachers just don’t want to lose their jobs!”), or about how those who are skeptical must be “against accessibility”. Read more...
23 juin 2013

Helping anxious students

By Nicola KoperI’ve had a few reminders lately that university students represent a particular subset of the population. Like most of their professors, a lot of our students are type-A, hard-working, driven and perhaps tend towards overachievement. Traits that most of us can sympathize with. While these personality traits may well have brought them to their current level of success, they can also lead to levels of anxiety and stress that less passionate students never have to face. The vast majority of professors care not just about the academic performance of students, but also about their personal well-being, and indeed the two can influence each other. Read more...
23 juin 2013

Labour markets in Canada - Which graduates are really in short supply?

http://www.universityaffairs.ca/images/icons/envelope.pngBy Ted Hewitt. A spate of analyses and commentaries have appeared recently, proclaiming the deleterious effects of actual and looming skills shortages on the Canadian economy. Yet in reality, the situation – and its solutions – is far more complex than such simple statistics would imply and a closer look at Canada’s “skilled labour shortage” reveals more than a few surprises. Labour shortages, in fact, do not just occur in the sciences, as is commonly presumed. They are just as prevalent – if not more so – in many social sciences and humanities fields. First, consider how the term “skills shortage”, meaning essentially fewer people available to fill critical shortages, is typically characterized. A report prepared by the CIBC World Markets indicates, for example, that in 2012, no less than 30 percent of Canadian businesses indicated that they faced a skilled labour shortage, double the number posted in 2010. Another survey of 100 senior executives published late last year by Workopolis similarly indicated that 32 percent believed that the shortage of skilled workers was the number one problem facing Canadian business in general. Read more...
23 juin 2013

Could the MOOC save education?

http://profile.ak.fbcdn.net/hprofile-ak-ash3/71056_132420132079_1103690_q.jpgBy Rick Gray. Two weeks ago, in this space, I offered a few observations about the rise of the massive, open, online course (MOOC) and my initial experience with a course on the subject of Global Climate Change. At some future date, if the crick don’t rise, I will expand upon what I’ve learned about Anthropocentric Global Warming (AGW). For now, let’s focus on the possibilities of a world in which MOOCs are becoming a real educational option. My long-time readers will know that my critique of modern education begins with the proposition that we, as a society, have no idea what we want our schools to accomplish. We get little guidance from professional educators – especially the well-paid, high-ranking  administrators of our universities and public school systems – who are, for the most part, mere politicians.  For surely, their agendas are political – defending and, when possible, seeking to expand their bureaucratic empires. Read more...
23 juin 2013

University Provosts Express Skepticism over MOOCs

http://hastac.org/files/imagecache/homepage_50/pictures/picture-1-5019ea28da94929f0845e016464d209b.jpgThe Committee on Institutional Cooperation recently released a position paper on MOOCs and higher education written by fifteen university provosts. The paper expresses the provosts' skepticism of MOOCs, calling into question the need to partner with external providers, saying “while new and cost effective technological capabilities make certain changes in higher education possible, it does not necessarily follow that such changes are desirable, or would be endorsed or utilized by our existing students, faculty, or community members. Nor does it mean that we fully grasp the costs and business models that might surround new strategies for broadly disseminating course content.” 
The provosts further questioned the general effectiveness of MOOCs explaining that the ability for MOOCs to technically reaching hundreds of thousands of participants “is not, in and of itself, a means for extending educational opportunity to millions of potential ‘students.’ ” Read more...
23 juin 2013

Probing Question: Are MOOCs here to stay?

http://news.psu.edu/profiles/psu_profile/themes/psu/images/footer_logo.pngBy Melissa Beattie-Moss. In higher education, 2013 may be remembered as the year of the MOOC. For those playing catch-up, MOOCs, or Massive Open Online Courses, are college-level classes taught entirely over the Internet. Like students in brick-and-mortar classrooms, students enrolled in MOOCs take notes and tests and participate in discussions. Unlike traditional courses -- or even typical online courses -- MOOCs are usually free, draw hundreds or even thousands of students, and are run with minimal direct contact with teachers, with an emphasis instead on brief and (presumably) engaging video presentations. Colleges and universities are scrambling to get onboard the MOOC train -- hundreds now offer some form of Web-based curriculum -- while at the same time debating what the trend means for the future of higher education. Read more...
23 juin 2013

Remodel or new construction?

University Business LogoBy Elizabeth Millard. Many colleges and universities are tempted to revamp buildings because there isn’t enough space to construct new, technology-rich facilities. But sometimes, the amount of renovation required can drive costs so high that it may be less expensive to build something new. That was the situation at Gulf Coast State College (Fla). College president James Kerley explains that an early candidate for a new technology center was a building from the 1960s that was being used as a tech hub. Read more...
23 juin 2013

Campus construction roundup: See stories of budgets behind new buildings

http://www.universitybusiness.com/sites/default/files/UB-logo_4_0_0.pngBy Melissa Ezarik. Hardhats were not an uncommon sight amid the bustle of activity on college and university campuses this year. But there’s no such thing as a standard journey from building vision to completion. Take a look at funding and budgeting snapshots of seven campus construction projects completed between last summer and this summer. Read more...
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