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19 mars 2018

Project to recognise the qualifications of refugees in Europe will be expanded

By Brendan O’Malley – Managing Editor. In Commentary this week, Sjur Bergan and Stig Arne Skjerven say the European Qualifications Passport for Refugees project is being expanded to involve more countries and partners and could be of use across the world in future. Ayenachew A Woldegiyorgis explains why it is imperative for Ethiopia to reconsider its higher education priorities and develop at least one research university. And Simon Marginson recommends a better approach than the current higher education policy in England which sees students paying too much and the public too little, resulting in higher education being viewed as an elitist private good.
   Also in Commentary, Huey-Jen Jenny Su argues against reducing international talent mobility to prevent brain drain and suggests governments rather focus on creating an attractive research environment. And Serhiy Kvit says university autonomy in Ukraine is central to a new Roadmap to Higher Education Reform developed in response to an OECD report on the state of Ukraine’s education system.
   In an Obituary, Martin Rees from the University of Cambridge pays tribute to his colleague, the famous cosmologist Stephen Hawking who died last week, for triumphing in science while fighting the debilitating restrictions of degenerative disease from the age of 22.
   In our World Blog, Grace Karram Stephenson asks if academic freedom is a platform to share any controversial ideas that come to light or whether professors should cushion their opinions to make class a safer place for diverse students.
   In Features, Suvendrini Kakuchi reports that Japan, though still a leading research nation, is to boost research funding for digital era technologies as it struggles to maintain its global scientific research competitiveness. Pål Magnus Lykkja and Jan Petter Myklebust report on fears that the European Commission’s attempts to establish an open access platform for science will be undermined by the influence of commercial science publishers. More...
19 mars 2018

Won’t somebody please think of the children?

Won’t somebody please think of the children?
Dylan Collins, tech.eu, 2015/02/27
So this sounds so unlike Europe, but maybe I'm just naive: "There is a new generation of kids startups focused on platform, tools and adtech fuelled by a broader structural shift in the sector. Occasionally referred to as ‘kidtech’, they are tackling opportunities in the kids market that are worth billions of dollars in the adult sector." The tenor of the argument is that the U.S. Children’s Online Privacy and Protection Act (COPPA) prohibits behavioural online advertising, and that this is being adopted by Europe, creating a spending gap that is being addressed by, well, what. More...

19 mars 2018

Whoa wow wow!

Whoa wow wow!
swiked, Tumblr, 2015/02/27
So look at this photo of a dress and answer one simple question: what colour is it?

If you are like me, you will say that the dress is blue (with black trim). But if you are like Andrea and the other half of the internet, you will say the dress is white, with gold trim. Why is this significant? Typically we think we mean the same thing with simple words like 'blue' and 'white. More...

19 mars 2018

NY Times Textbook Publishing, Inc.

NY Times Textbook Publishing, Inc.
Greg Mankiw, Greg Mankiw's Blog, 2015/02/27
This is why economists, and especially Harvard economists, have such a poor reputation. Arguing against the New York Times, Greg Mankiw maintaines that high textbook prices are justified because, if prices are too high, a competitor (like, say, the New York Times) could enter the market and undercut prices. More...

19 mars 2018

Why Everyone Was Wrong About Net Neutrality

Why Everyone Was Wrong About Net Neutrality
Tim Wu, The New Yorker, 2015/02/27
I will admit that I was both surprised and pleased by the decision in the United States to support net neutrality, "preserving an open Internet by prohibiting broadband providers from blocking or slowing content that flows across their pipes." In this article Tim Wu - who coined the term 'net neutrality' in the first place - explains why we were wrong to expect the decision would go the other way. More...

19 mars 2018

Cloudy Logic

Cloudy Logic
Robin James, The New Inquiry, 2015/01/30
A few talks ago I cause a twitter in the audience by comparing big data analytics to astrology. It was no more than a half-formed thought, but as it turns out I'm not the only one who has had this thought and this author - via the mediation of Thomas Adorno - has given it substance. More...

19 mars 2018

Investigating the Yik Yak attack

Investigating the Yik Yak attack
Alex Reid, Digital Digs, 2015/01/30
From the moment an application came into existence that allowed people in the same general area to make anonymous comments to each other it became inevitable that students would use it to criticize a professor (hence, the 'Yik Yak attack'). It is also inevitable that within a few minutes to the incident the Chronicle would publish an article lamenting the behaviour. More...

19 mars 2018

From free to fee: How U.S. dailies decide to use paywalls

From free to fee: How U.S. dailies decide to use paywalls
Natalie Jomini Stroud, American Press Institute, 2015/01/30
Interesting report that observes that few newspapers use research of any sort (beyond asking each other whether it's a good idea) before implementing paywalls (it's a summary of a recent paper that is not available online (I searched)). More...

19 mars 2018

The Book of Life

The Book of Life
Various authors, 2015/03/02

Another find from Doug Belshaw is this absolutely fascinating Book of Life. It's organized into Capitalism, Work, Relationships, and Self, each one with a number of subtopics. More...

19 mars 2018

What Necessary Adult Skills Were You Never Taught Growing Up?

What Necessary Adult Skills Were You Never Taught Growing Up?
Eric Ravenscraft, LifeHacker, 2015/03/02
Doug Belshaw flags this article in LifeHacker asking people to comment on the life skills they never learned growing up. As one commenter says, "I just realized, this entire article boils down to 'give Lifehacker ideas for future articles'." But hey, why not? In any case, the comments section is filled with ideas for good life lessons. More...

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