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28 mai 2018

Establishing a joint degree programme offers unique rewards and challenges

By Brendan O’Malley – Managing Editor. In Commentary, Jessica Kling writes about the challenges and rewards of establishing a joint international undergraduate degree programme as the two universities involved – in Japan and the United States – jointly enrol their first cohort of students this year. Genevieve Barrons contends that the unwillingness of formal education systems to allow themselves to be ‘disrupted’ means millions of people, particularly refugees, will remain on the margins. Robert Ubell advises university leaders to look before they leap when it comes to launching international branch campuses as the reputational and financial risks are high. And Andrew Gunn and Priya Kapade wonder if other countries will follow the example of the UK government in addressing concerns about grade inflation at universities, as the phenomenon of rising grades seems to have gone global.
   In our World Blog this week, Kriengsak Chareonwongsak says universities in Asia are still placing too much emphasis on theoretical knowledge instead of striking a balance between theory and practice to make graduates more marketable to employers, but this is changing.
   In Features, Wagdy Sawahel outlines the findings of a report entitled Attacks on Medical Education, which explores the impact on medical education of armed conflict and civil disturbances in seven countries where conflicts are ongoing, while Maina Waruru reports on efforts to develop common standards for postgraduate training in East Africa. More...
28 mai 2018

Dutch universities aim to limit overseas intake

Dutch universities are aiming to reduce the number of students that come to their university, especially students coming from abroad to study, writes Emma Brown for Dutch ReviewMore...
23 mai 2018

'Unlawful Presence' and International Students

HomeBy Elizabeth Redden. New policy guidance published last week appears to make it easier for international students to accrue “unlawful presence” in the U.S., a change that could have implications for their ability to re-enter the country in the future. Individuals who accrue more than 180 days of unlawful presence before they depart from the U.S. can be barred from re-entering the country for a period of three to 10 years. More...

23 mai 2018

Reported Censorship at a Confucius Institute

HomeBy Elizabeth Redden. A journalist at Foreign Policy wrote that a reference to her reporting experience in Taiwan was deleted from her biography when she gave a talk at Savannah State University’s Confucius Institute, one of more than 500 such centers worldwide funded by the Chinese government to teach language and culture. More...

23 mai 2018

North Korea Releases Americans

HomeBy Elizabeth Redden. Two Americans formerly affiliated with a private university in Pyongyang were among three people released from North Korean detention Tuesday. More...

23 mai 2018

Columbia Professor Barred From Israel

HomeBy Elizabeth Redden. A Columbia University professor was barred from entering Israel because of her ties to the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement, Haaretz reported. More...

22 mai 2018

In China, Alleged Attempt to Intimidate a Student Activist

HomeBy Elizabeth Redden. A Peking University student who filed a request for records related to an alleged rape of a student by a professor 20 years ago said university officials tried to intimidate her after she submitted the request, National Public Radio reported. More...

22 mai 2018

The Rise of Netpolitik: How the Internet Is Changing International Politics and Diplomacy

The Rise of Netpolitik: How the Internet Is Changing International Politics and Diplomacy
This is the sort of publication people working in net related fields should read on a regular basis. Not because they have anything to do with online learning or even the internet in particular, but because they help as an antidote against slipping into the rut of traditional thinking. More...

21 mai 2018

What I learned from Lithuanian students

Screenshot-2018-5-7 Education – Views Research – The ConversationThe term transition economies is what we now use to describe Eastern European countries that, until 1991, were under the grip of the Soviet Union before moving away from a centrally planned and Communist economic system and towards a free enterprise and market economy. More...

21 mai 2018

Atlantic Canada needs international students

Screenshot-2018-5-7 Education – Views Research – The ConversationFederal Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen has repeatedly urged international students to stay in Canada, and the governments of all four provinces in Atlantic Canada have created special pathways to help international students transition to permanent resident status. More...

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