Free university education not just a francophone thing
The Graduate Students’ Association (GSA) of Concordia University agrees with Duchesne (and the Liberal Party of the 1960s, which promised it) that free education is the ideal — but we think we should start working toward this goal now. We will be participating in this afternoon’s student demonstration to make that clear. Is free university education fiscally feasible? Read more...
It’s more than a job that students are looking for
With shrinking public funding and stronger corporate influence in higher education, universities’ identities are changing.
In the evolving world of Canadian higher education, it is paramount that universities engage in conversations regarding the qualities that they desire to see in students as a result of undergraduate education.
The University of Alberta has taken the first steps in this direction, prompted by the Students’ Union and the Centre for Teaching and Learning. Read more...
Universities were the big losers in the summit on higher education
And their loss will ultimately be reflected in the quality of higher education to which Quebecers have access.In some respects, and for some people, the much ballyhooed summit on higher education was indeed a success.
Others, however, were rightly left wondering whether the whole thing was anything more than a public relations exercise that served the interests of the government, but hardly anyone else’s. Read more...
The U.K.’s radical tuition experiment
By Léo Charbonneau. As Quebec debated this week whether to index tuition fees to inflation, a far more radical overhaul of tuition policy plays out in England. The Quebec government announced on Monday it plans to raise tuition by 3 percent, or about $70 from the current level of just under $2,200. Compare this to the U.K. government, which implemented a plan last year that saw university students in England pay on average £8,500 ($13,300 CDN) for the school year, a massive increase of more than 250% from the previous average tuition of £3,300. (Tuition policy in Northern Ireland, Wales and Scotland is different, and students in those countries did not experience a similar increase in fees.)
It’s been a wild ride for tuition fees in England over a relatively short period of time. Tuition fees of £1,000 were first introduced in 1998 then were tripled to around £3,000 starting in 2006. In the current system, all students are eligible for loans to cover the full tuition costs and repayment of these loans begins after graduation. Read more...
Have universities lost their way?
By Reid Robinson. Robinson was involved in administration at the University of Regina for many years, serving as dean of arts, associate vice-president academic, and university secretary.Since the early 19th century, "Critics, reformers and governments have claimed that the studies carried out in universities are outdated, irrelevant or in a word useless, and that they need to serve national needs more effectively and more directly to become in other words more useful," notes Stefan Collini, a professor of intellectual history and English literature at Cambridge University, in a recent book What Are Universities For.
This has continued to the present day. Read more...
How to choose the right university for you
When choosing a university, bear one thing in mind: it’s not all academic. As well as finding a course that matches your interests, think carefully about the whole student experience and whether it will suit you. If you don’t like your surroundings or the educational culture of a place, remember that you will have to put up with them for three years or more. Britain’s universities and colleges are hugely diverse, but for many people the stereotype will be a campus university such as Leeds, Birmingham or Warwick. These are like self-contained towns, with accommodation, academic and leisure facilities on a single site. There are pros and cons to spending most of your time in a place that is so student-oriented. Read more...
UKBA clarifies universities' responsibilities
By David Matthews. Institutions need not subject international students to biometric attendance monitoring, agency reveals.The UK Border Agency has clarified that universities do not need separate or biometric attendance monitoring systems for international students after confusion in the sector over how strict checks should be. Universities UK said that the move was a "step in the right direction" for the often fraught relationship between the sector and the agency. Students' unions, meanwhile, have called for a scaling-back of attendance checks that make international students feel like "visa cheats". Institutions must prove to the UKBA that international students are engaging with their studies if they want a licence to sponsor them. Read more...
Student visas fall by a fifth
By David Matthews. The number of visas issued to overseas students has fallen by a fifth although applications for university student visas have increased by 3 per cent, according to the latest figures from the Office of National Statistics.The statistics come as the government was accused of failing to deliver a "credible response" to a recommendation from the House of Commons Business, Skills and Innovation Committee that students should be removed from net migration targets.
There were 209,804 study visas issued for the year ending December 2012, a fall of 20 per cent on the year before, although these data are not broken down by universities, colleges and schools.
There was a sizable drop off in study visas issued to students from South Asia: Pakistani (-69 per cent), Indian (-50 per cent), Sri Lankan (-72 per cent) and Bangladeshi (-53 per cent) nationals all saw steep declines. Read more...