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10 octobre 2016

25% of faculty in top central universities are women

In an analysis of the gender ratio of faculty members in 28 prominent Central universities in India, women faculty members constitute only one-quarter of the total teachers, writes Kritika Sharma for Daily News and AnalysisMore...
10 octobre 2016

Graduate full-time job prospects decline – Study

Job prospects for Australian university graduates are declining, with a new study showing fewer and fewer people are finding full-time employment after completing higher education, writes Tim Lamacraft for ABC NewsMore...
10 octobre 2016

Plan to ban full-face Islamic veil in universities

Norway's right-wing government recently announced plans to ban the full-face Islamic veil from classrooms and university lecture halls, reports AFPMore...
10 octobre 2016

Universities produce graduates to businesses’ orders

About 400,000 students finish universities every year, but most of them cannot satisfy employers and they need to undergo retraining at their place of work. Therefore, businesses now tend to order universities to produce workers who can meet their standards, reports VietNamNet BridgeMore...
10 octobre 2016

Private colleges fret over Clinton’s university plan

Hillary Clinton announced her new higher education plan this summer with a burst of fanfare, promising to invest US$500 billion to eliminate tuition for millions of students at public colleges and universities across the country. But while the liberal wing of the party has cheered the idea, many in education have questioned how such a plan would work, writes Alan Rappeport for The New York TimesMore...
10 octobre 2016

Online higher education is now a global market

By Jeffrey R Young, The Chronicle of Higher Education. Back when colleges first started experimenting with teaching online, pundits mused that competition for college students would one day be global. A student would be able to sit down at a computer and take a course literally from anywhere. More...
10 octobre 2016

Will the United States think big again?

By Simon Marginson. The 1960s in the United States were an amazing time. The explosion of popular culture and radical politics in the second half of the decade, with its many icons – protest, black power, Che, peace, ecology, weed, Hendrix, the Stones, the Beatles etc – that are still with us, and also the disaster of the Vietnam War, have tended to eclipse the mainstream achievements. But in the 1960s the modern world was remade and it was remade first of all in the US. More...
10 octobre 2016

The shifting landscape of doctoral education

By Patrick Blessinger. The doctoral education landscape has changed dramatically over the last decade. One of the most important factors driving this change is the greater participation rates in graduate education from all segments of society. More...
10 octobre 2016

Why outward-looking HE programmes should be for all

By Ranjit Goswami. Few faculty members or universities can ever simulate what happens in real life in real time in the classroom or laboratory. This is true for any discipline in higher education, and more true for areas of the social sciences and humanities; for would-be scientists too, real life exposure in real time helps them to develop all-important life skills. More...
10 octobre 2016

International students treated as commodities

By Jeannie Rea. More than 25% of Australian higher education enrolments were international students in 2015. Of these 280,000 were studying onshore, mostly at Australia’s public universities with a very small number at private higher education providers. More...
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